"Officials from the Group of 7 are striving to strike a
delicate balance that encourages Russia to keep pumping oil but to sell it at a
discount.
WASHINGTON — As the United States and its Western counterparts
race to finalize the mechanics of an oil price cap intended to starve Russia of
revenue and stabilize global energy markets, a crucial question remains
unresolved: How should the price be set?
The Group of 7 countries that formally backed the price cap
concept this month are deliberating how much Russia should be allowed to charge
for its oil as they prepare to release more details of the plan. It has emerged
as a central question that could determine the success of the novel idea,
Russia’s response and the trajectory of oil prices as winter approaches.
Setting the price will require aligning the complex array of economic and
diplomatic forces that govern volatile oil markets.
The consequences of getting the oil price cap wrong could be
severe for the world economy, and time is running short. The Biden
administration fears that if the cap is not in place by early December, oil
prices around the world could skyrocket given Russia’s outsize role as an
energy producer. That’s because when a European Union oil embargo and a ban on
financial insurance services for Russian oil transactions take effect on Dec.
5, the removal of millions of barrels of Russian oil from the market could send
prices soaring.
European financing and insurance dominate the global oil
market, so the looming sanctions could disrupt exports to parts of the world
that do not have their own embargoes — by making it harder or more expensive to
get Russian oil at a time when energy costs are already high. The price cap
will essentially be an exception to Western sanctions, allowing Russian oil to
be sold and shipped as long as it remains below a certain price.
The idea has won plaudits from economists who see it as an
elegant win-win strategy for the West. But many energy analysts and traders
have expressed deep skepticism about the concept. They believe that a fear of
sanctions could scare financial services companies off Russian oil, and that
Russia and its trading partners will circumvent the cap through new forms of
insurance or illicit transactions.
The impact of the proposed oil price cap and the potential
for unintended consequences are two of the biggest quandaries facing the
nations that have been enduring soaring inflation prompted by supply chain
disruptions.
“We are looking at a far more complex oil market,” said Paul
Sheldon, a geopolitical risk analyst at S&P Global Platts Analytics. “This
is an unprecedented dynamic where you have such a large supplier of oil under
unprecedented sanctions. We’re in new territory on several levels.”
Exactly how the price cap will be set remains unclear.
In a joint statement this month, finance ministers from the
Group of 7 said the “initial” price cap would be based on a range of “technical
inputs” and decided on by the group of countries that join the agreement. The
Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control said last week that the
price cap would be determined by a “range of factors” and that countries that
were part of the price cap coalition would make the decision by consensus. The
coalition would be headed by a rotating coordinator from among the countries.
A Treasury official said the process for setting the level
of the oil price cap would constitute the next phase of the agreement, after
technical details about enforcement had been decided and more countries had
signed on to the coalition.
As U.S. officials think about setting the price cap, they
are focused on two numbers: Russia’s cost of producing oil and the price that
the commodity historically fetched on global markets before the sanctions on
Russia sent prices higher.
The Biden administration realizes that Russia will not have
an incentive to keep producing oil if a cap is set so low that Russia cannot
sell it for more than it costs to pump it. However, setting the cap too high
will allow Russia to benefit from the upheaval it has caused and blunt the
cap’s ability to sufficiently curtail Russia’s oil export revenues.
Before the sanctions on Russia and the pandemic, Russian
crude, known as Urals, typically sold for between $55 and $65 a barrel.
Determining Russia’s cost of production is more complicated because some of its
wells are more expensive to operate than others. Most estimates are around $40
per barrel.
The price cap could settle somewhere among those numbers.
Officials are also discussing whether shipping costs should
be included in the cap or if it should just include the oil itself. Separate
caps would be enacted for Russia’s refined oil products, such as gas oil and
fuel oil, that are used for operating machinery and heating homes.
Oil prices have hovered around $90 a barrel in recent weeks.
Russian oil is currently selling at a discount of about 30 percent. Some
analysts believe that designing the cap as a mandated level below global
benchmark prices could be more effective since oil prices can swing sharply.
“If you fix it at a certain level, that could create some
risks because the market can fluctuate,” said Ben Cahill, a senior fellow in
the Energy Security and Climate Change Program at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, who noted that oil prices could fall below the cap level
if it was set too high.
“To increase the economic pain on Russia, you want to make
the capped price substantially lower than the global average,” he said.
As of now, the Treasury Department does not appear to
support such an idea. The United States intends for the cap to be a fixed price
— one that would be regularly reviewed and could be changed if the countries in
the pact agreed to do so. The frequency of the reviews would depend on market
volatility. Setting the cap at a discounted rate would introduce additional
complexity and compliance burdens, the Treasury official said, because the cap
rate could change hourly.
Making sure the price cap is adhered to is another hurdle.
Treasury Department officials have been holding discussions with banks and
maritime insurers to develop a system in which buyers of Russian oil products
would “attest” to the price that they had paid, releasing providers of
financial services of the responsibility for violations of the cap.
In its guidance last week, the Treasury Department said
service providers for seaborne Russian oil would not face sanctions as long as
they obtained documentation certifying that the cap was being honored. However,
it did warn that buyers who knowingly made oil purchases above the price cap
using insurance that was subject to the ban “may be a target for a sanctions
enforcement action.”
The impact of a price cap on global markets is difficult to
predict. Mr. Cahill suggested that it could essentially create three tiers of
crude, with some Russian oil being sold at the capped price, other Russian oil
being sold illicitly or with alternative forms of financing and non-Russian oil
being sold by other oil-producing nations.
It is not clear how many countries beyond the Group of 7
will join the agreement. The Biden administration is hopeful that even if
countries such as China and India do not formally participate they will use it
as leverage to negotiate lower prices with Russia.
Besides the oil cap’s price, the other big wild card is
Russia’s response to it. Russian officials have said they will not sell oil to
countries that are part of the price cap coalition, and analysts expect that
the country will do its best to fan the volatility with some form of
retaliation.
The United States hopes that economic logic will prevail and
that oil will keep flowing, albeit at a cheaper price.
“Russia may bluster and say they won’t sell below the capped
price, but the economics of holding back oil just don’t make sense,” Wally
Adeyemo, the deputy Treasury secretary, said at a Brookings Institution event
last week. “The price cap creates a clear economic incentive to sell under the
cap.”
Edward Fishman, a senior research scholar at the Center on
Global Energy Policy at Columbia University, argued that the price cap could
work because the incentives that it would create aligned most buyers, sellers
and facilitators of oil transactions toward compliance. He suggested that global
oil prices could end up organically gravitating toward the level of the price
cap.
However, Mr. Fishman acknowledged that Russia and its
president, Vladimir V. Putin, might read the incentives differently.
“There’s always a sliver of a doubt in people’s minds about
Putin’s thinking and his willingness to set the global economy, and his own
economy, ablaze in order to make a point,” Mr. Fishman said."
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