"While in their unprecedented broadside of sanctions on Russia, the
U.S. and Western allies
went out of their way to spare Russian energy shipments and keep economies humming and voters warm, the oil market has gone on strike anyway. Acting as if energy were already in the crosshairs of Western sanctions officials, refiners have balked at buying Russian oil and banks are refusing to finance shipments of Russian commodities, the WSJ reports citing traders, oil executives and bankers.
went out of their way to spare Russian energy shipments and keep economies humming and voters warm, the oil market has gone on strike anyway. Acting as if energy were already in the crosshairs of Western sanctions officials, refiners have balked at buying Russian oil and banks are refusing to finance shipments of Russian commodities, the WSJ reports citing traders, oil executives and bankers.
This
self-imposed embargo which has effectively halted a majority of Russian
oil shipments, threatens to drive up energy prices globally by removing
a gusher of oil from a market that was tight even before the Russian
invasion of Ukraine. Meanwhile, Russia, waging war and in need of
revenue with its financial system in turmoil, is taking extreme steps to
convince companies to buy its most precious commodity.
We previously reported that
owners of oil tankers had already started to avoid Russian ports
because of both the military invasion of Ukraine and apprehension that
sanctions for oil could also come soon, and as a result rates for oil
tankers on Russian crude routes had exploded as much as nine-fold in the
past few days.' ZH
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