The Group of Seven rich nations, the European Union and Australia have set price caps for Russian diesel and other refined petroleum products to keep markets supplied while limiting Moscow’s revenues when an EU embargo kicks in.
The coalition on Friday said it had set the price caps at $100 per barrel on products that trade at a premium to crude, principally diesel, and $45 per barrel for products that trade at a discount, such as fuel oil and naphtha. That was in line with the levels suggested by the European Commission.
The price caps on petroleum products will be implemented on Feb 5 or “very soon thereafter,” the coalition said in a statement. Participating countries said they would include “time-limited exceptions” for products that are loaded onto a vessel prior to Feb 5.
The EU ban bars EU vessels from carrying Russian-origin petroleum products, unless the products are purchased at or below the price cap agreed by the coalition.
The provision also applies to companies that provide technical, brokering or financial assistance such as insurance for cargoes carrying Russian refined products.
If a vessel sailing under the flag of a third party intentionally carries Russian oil above the price cap, EU operators will be prohibited from insuring, financing and servicing the vessel for 90 days after the cargo has been unloaded.
EU-flagged vessels will be subject to penalties according to national legislation, but the EU is working on a penalty of 5% of global turnover for companies that break EU sanctions.
The G7 coalition said it would review the Dec 5 crude oil price cap in March.
Decisions on any changes would be driven by technical analysis by groups such as the International Energy Agency, while factoring in the impact on Russian oil revenues.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 5th, 2023.
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