Russia has said that against the belief of the West that the price cap against its oil is working, the country does not recognize the price cap and have been able to contain any pressure from the US and its EU alliesKremlin spokesman, Dimitry Petrov, said Russia has made enough arrangements to contain the price cap against its oil. He spoke yesterday aga

inst the backdrop of claims by the U.S. the Western price cap was working well.
“We do not and will not recognize any cap,” Peskov told reporters in Moscow as carried by Russian news agency Interfax.

U.S. energy envoy, Amos Hochstein, had lst Monday, said that the price cap on Russia’s crude oil and oil products was working well.
“I think the beauty of the process is that it is working and that Russian oil and Russian products are being traded below the price cap,” Hochstein said on the sidelines of the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston, as carried by Reuters.

Also Read: Russia Will Keep Selling Cheap Oil At Bumped-Up Levels To India, Even After Ukraine War

Russian crude is still flowing to the global markets, but buyers are paying much lower prices for it, which shrinks Putin’s revenues from oil exports, the mainstay of his budget.

That’s essentially the dual purpose of the price cap on crude as intended by the U.S. Administration – keep the oil market well supplied and reduce revenues for Russia.

Observers however say Russia’s oil production and exports have been resilient so far, defying early expectations of a plunge in supply after the West agreed to impose sanctions on the country’s oil to cut its revenues from energy sales.

Also Read: Russia: U.S. Offers Additional $2bn Security Assistance To Ukraine

But Russia’s budget revenues are sinking due to the low prices of its flagship Urals blend, whose discount to Brent Crude has widened to $30 per barrel.

Due to the low price of Urals in January, Russia’s budget was $24.7 billion (1.76 trillion rubles) into deficit in January, compared to a surplus for January 2022, as state revenues from oil and gas plunged by 46.4% due to the low price of Urals and lower natural gas exports, the Russian finance ministry said in preliminary estimates earlier this month.

Budget revenues from energy sales – including taxes and customs revenues – plummeted last month to the lowest level since August 2020.

By Bosco Agba


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