Mother Merkel, where are you?
"HOUSTON — The European Union’s embargo on most Russian oil imports
could deliver a fresh jolt to the world economy, propelling a realignment of
global energy trading that leaves Russia economically weaker, gives
China and India bargaining power and enriches producers like Saudi Arabia.
Europe, the United States and much
of the rest of the world could suffer because oil prices, which have been
marching higher for months, could climb further as Europe buys energy from more
distant suppliers. European companies will have to scour the world for the
grades of oil that their refineries can process as easily as Russian oil. There
could even be sporadic shortages of certain fuels like diesel, which is crucial for
trucks and agricultural equipment.
In effect, Europe is trading one
unpredictable oil supplier — Russia — for unstable exporters in the Middle
East.
Europe’s hunt for new oil supplies —
and Russia’s quest to find new buyers of its oil — will leave no part of the
world untouched, energy experts said. But figuring out the impact on each
country or business is difficult because leaders, energy executives and traders
will respond in varying ways.
China and India could be protected from some of the burden
of higher oil prices because Russia is offering them discounted oil. In the
last couple of months, Russia has become the second-biggest oil supplier to India,
leapfrogging other big producers like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates. India has several large refineries that could earn rich profits by
refining Russian oil into diesel and other fuels in high demand around the
world.
Ultimately, Western leaders are aiming to weaken President
Vladimir Putin by denying him billions of dollars in energy sales. They hope
their moves will force Russian oil producers to shut down
wells because the country does not have many places to store oil while it lines
up new buyers. But the effort is perilous and could fail. If oil prices rise
substantially, Russia’s overall oil revenue may not fall much.
Other oil producers like Saudi Arabia and Western oil
companies like Exxon Mobil, BP, Shell and Chevron stand to do well simply
because oil prices are higher. The flip side is that global consumers and
businesses will have to pay more for every gallon of fuel and goods shipped in
trucks and trains.
“It’s a historic, big deal,” said
Robert McNally, an energy adviser to President George W. Bush. “This will
reshape not only commercial relationships but political and geopolitical ones
as well.”
E.U. officials have yet to release all the details of their
effort to squelch Russian oil exports but have said those policies will go into
effect over months. That is meant to give Europeans time to prepare, but it
will also give Russia and its partners time to devise workarounds. Who will adapt
better to the new reality is hard to know.
According to what European officials
have said so far, the union will ban Russian tanker imports of crude oil and
refined fuels like diesel, representing two-thirds of the continent’s purchases
from Russia. The ban will be phased in over six months for crude and eight
months for diesel and other refined fuels.
In addition, Germany and Poland have
pledged to stop importing oil from Russia by pipeline, which means Europeans
could reduce Russian imports by 3.3 million barrels a day by the end of the
year.
And the union has said European companies will no longer be
allowed to insure tankers carrying Russian oil anywhere. That ban will also be
phased in over several months. Because many of the world’s largest insurers are
based in Europe, that move could significantly raise the cost of shipping
Russian energy, though insurers in China, India and Russia itself might now
pick up some of that business.
Before the invasion of Ukraine,
roughly half of Russia’s oil exports went to Europe, representing $10 billion
in transactions a month. Sales of Russian oil to E.U. members have declined somewhat
in the last few months, and those to the United States and Britain have been
eliminated.
Some energy analysts said the new
European effort could help untangle Europe from Russian energy and limit Mr.
Putin’s political leverage over Western countries.
“There are many geopolitical repercussions,” said Meghan L.
O’Sullivan, director of the geopolitics of energy project at Harvard’s Kennedy
School. “The ban will draw the United States more deeply into the global energy
economy, and it will strengthen energy ties between Russia and China.”
Another hope of Western leaders is
that their moves will reduce Russia’s position in the global energy industry.
The idea is that despite its efforts to find new buyers in China, India and
elsewhere, Russia will export less oil overall. As a result, Russian producers
will need to shut wells, which they will not be able to easily restart because
of the difficulties of drilling and producing oil in inhospitable Arctic
fields.
Still, the new European policy was
the product of compromises between countries that can easily replace Russian
energy and countries, like Hungary, that can’t easily break their dependence on
Moscow or are unwilling to do so. That is why 800,000 barrels a day of Russian
oil that goes to Europe by pipeline was excluded from the embargo for now.
The Europeans also decided to phase in the restrictions on
insuring Russian oil shipments because of the importance of the shipping
industry to Greece and Cyprus.
Such compromises could undermine the effectiveness of the
new European effort, some energy experts warned.
“Why wait six months?” asked David Goldwyn, a top State
Department energy official in the Obama administration. “As the sanctions are
configured now, all that will happen is you will see more Russian crude and
product flow to other destinations,” he said.
But he added, “It’s a necessary
first step.”
Despite the oil embargo, Europe is likely to remain reliant
on Russian natural gas for some time, possibly years. That could preserve some
of Mr. Putin’s leverage, especially if gas demand spikes during a cold winter.
European leaders have fewer alternatives to Russian gas because the world’s
other major suppliers of that fuel — the United States, Australia and Qatar —
can’t quickly expand exports substantially.
Another wild card is the growing
popularity of electric cars and renewable energy. Higher oil and gas prices
could encourage individuals, businesses and elected officials in Europe and
elsewhere to more quickly turn away from combustion engine cars and power
plants that run on fossil fuels.
Russia also has other cards to play,
which could undermine the effectiveness of the European embargo.
China is a growing market for Russia. Connected mainly by
pipelines that are near capacity, China increased its tanker shipments of
Russian crude in recent months.
Saudi Arabia and Iran might lose
from those increased Russian sales to China, and Middle Eastern sellers have
been forced to reduce their prices to compete with the heavily discounted
Russian crude.
Dr. O’Sullivan said the relationship
among Russia, Saudi Arabia and other members of the OPEC Plus alliance could
become more complicated “as Moscow and Riyadh compete to build and maintain
their market share in China.”
On Thursday, Saudi Arabia, Russia
and their partners in OPEC Plus said they would raise oil production by 648,000 barrels a day,
50 percent more than the 400,000 barrel increase they had agreed to last year.
But the cartel’s members have frequently failed to produce as much oil as they
have pledged to.
Even as energy commercial ties are
scrambled, the big oil producers like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates
have benefited overall from the war in Europe. Many European companies are now
eager to buy more oil from the Middle East. Saudi oil export revenues are
climbing and could set a record this year, according to Middle East Petroleum
and Economic Publications, which tracks the industry, pushing the kingdom’s
trade surplus to more than $250 billion.
India is another beneficiary because it has big refineries
that can process Russian crude, turning it into diesel, some of which could end
up in Europe even if the raw material came from Russia.
“India is becoming the de facto refining hub for Europe,”
analysts at RBC Capital Markets said in a recent report.
But buying diesel from India will raise costs in Europe
because it’s more expensive to ship fuel from India than to have it piped in
from Russian refineries. “The unintended consequence is that Europe is
effectively importing inflation to its own citizens,” the RBC analysts said.
India is getting about 600,000 barrels a day from Russia, up
from 90,000 a day last year, when Russia was a relatively minor supplier. It is
now India’s second-biggest supplier after Iraq.
But India could find it difficult to
keep buying from Russia if the European Union’s restrictions on European companies
insuring Russian oil shipments raise costs too much.
“India is a winner,” said Helima
Croft, RBC’s head of commodity strategy, “as long as they are not hit with
secondary sanctions.”"
India is now becoming our, European, gas station, powered by Russian oil. The only trouble is, diesel will be more expensive for everyone, including us. This may still push from power the party of US President Biden into the next US election this year, as inflation in the US is a politically significant problem. Biden's party was our ally in the fight against air pollution.
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