• 10 hours ago

Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com

Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.English

Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en
Transcript
00:00Next, the Kremlin is warning that the latest US sanctions on Russia's oil sector will destabilise
00:05the global energy market.
00:07On Friday, the Biden administration, in coordination with the British government, imposed sweeping
00:12sanctions directly hitting hundreds of targets, including two of Russia's biggest oil companies.
00:18The penalties also go after 183 vessels that trade oil as part of Russia's so-called
00:24shadow fleet of tankers.
00:26The move, seen as Biden's final blow to Russia before leaving office, is aimed at cutting
00:31off funding for Moscow's war in Ukraine.
00:34Veronica Behel has more.
00:38To cripple Moscow in its war with Ukraine, the Biden administration has taken decisive
00:43action in its final days in the White House.
00:46Slapping its toughest sanctions yet on Russia's oil and gas sector, Vladimir Putin's key revenue
00:51source.
00:52The move hits a plethora of entities and individuals.
01:17Directly targeting Russian energy giants Gazprom Neft and Surgut Neftegus, as well as over
01:22two dozen of the pair's subsidiaries based in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Luxembourg,
01:27and a host of Russian energy officials.
01:30The sanctions also blacklist what it calls Moscow's shadow fleet, a group of over 180
01:35tankers used to ship oil globally, routinely used to evade sanctions and help Russia's
01:40oil exporters elude the $60 per barrel price cap imposed by the West.
01:46The vessels are often managed by opaque entities in countries that aren't participating in
01:50the sanctions, often unclear with who is behind them, and the Kremlin has so far avoided
01:55commenting on the shadow fleet's existence.
01:58Several of these vessels are controlled by Russia's state-owned shipping company, Sovconflot,
02:03also affected by the new penalties, as are a host of Moscow's seaborne oil exports and
02:08insurance companies.
02:10The US has also gone after opaque traders of Russian oil, like the Black Pearl network,
02:15a major Russian crude oil trader, which has likely sold over $2 billion worth of Russian
02:20crude oil and oil products since 2023.
02:24Let's get some analysis on this now.
02:27We can speak to Benjamin Godwin, who is a partner at PRISM Strategic Intelligence, an
02:32investment advisory firm.
02:34Benjamin, good to have you on the programme, thanks so much for joining us.
02:38So Russia's oil industry is arguably the Kremlin's largest and most important source of revenue.
02:43Lay out for us how far-reaching these new sanctions are.
02:48These are pretty big and they've been a long time coming.
02:52The Biden administration has been very concerned about the impact of sanctions on the global
02:56oil market, so it's really taken its time before unrolling this.
03:01Oil exports are about 35% of 30% of Russian exports overall.
03:06So it's huge for Russia and it's a pretty big part of global energy demand.
03:11So it's a huge supplier to China and India.
03:16About 50% of Russian exports go into China, 35% into India.
03:21So it's a big move targeting not only the producers, but the shadow fleet, potentially
03:29a third of the entire shadow fleet as it exists at the moment.
03:32But of course, as we've seen in the past, Russia will be able to adapt to these and
03:36will already be undertaking measures to try and subvert the sanctions as they currently
03:41stand.
03:42Well, it's only been a few days since these sanctions have been imposed and we've received
03:46reports saying that three ships said to be part of Russia's shadow fleets are reportedly
03:51stranded floating off the coast of China.
03:55Give us your insights on what kind of immediate impacts you're seeing already from these sanctions.
04:01Yeah, absolutely.
04:03We're seeing these kind of disruptions, but more widely on the global market, we're not
04:07seeing the kind of disruptions that perhaps Vladimir Putin would like to warn about.
04:14Certainly us in the analyst community, as well as the U.S. government, have been quite
04:17clear that there's a lot of oil coming online this year, particularly from the U.S. and
04:22the U.S. recently revised up its production estimates.
04:27And of course, with the incoming Trump administration, we imagine that oil is going to flow even
04:31more freely from the United States.
04:33So the global market impact hasn't been huge as it stands.
04:38And if estimates are met from the U.S. and other markets like Guyana, Brazil, Canada,
04:44then the impact should be relatively negligible in terms of the oil price or at least manageable
04:50for consumers.
04:52And we may see a gradual shift of these key consumers, China and India, shifting to the
04:58Middle East, to Latin American suppliers rather than Russia.
05:03And this is, of course, not the first time that the West has gone after Russia's oil
05:07industry.
05:08We had that price cap come in last month.
05:11It didn't pay as much of a blow as the West was hoping that it would.
05:16Tell us about how these new sanctions will really deliver that last punch that Biden
05:21is hoping to pay.
05:24I think we have to think of sanctions as more of a cat and mouse game rather than a decisive,
05:28massive blow that will, say, shut down the Russian oil industry or the Russian gas industry.
05:33So for example, at the end of 2022, a lot of measures were brought in that probably
05:37cost Russia about eight billion dollars a month in early 2023.
05:43But those losses have been mitigated by new efforts to build up the shadow fleet and other
05:48ways of subverting these sanctions.
05:49So if you want to maintain long term pressure on Russia and the Russian energy industry,
05:55you're going to have to keep adapting your sanctions and focusing on sanctions enforcement.
06:00And I think this is going to be the concern with the Trump administration.
06:04We may well see a maximum pressure campaign, but we also anticipate perhaps that the Trump
06:08administration won't be as effective at enforcing these sanctions, particularly given that it's
06:14unlikely to be as deeply in cooperation with the European Union as the Biden administration.
06:20Well, Trump has said that he wants to use sanctions as little as possible when he gets
06:24back into the White House.
06:25He's also said that he wants to get Russia and Ukraine back at the negotiating table
06:30to end the war in Ukraine.
06:32These sanctions will be an important piece of leverage, won't they, going into those
06:36negotiations?
06:38Oh, yeah, absolutely. And I think that's, you know, as your commentator said in the
06:41piece, that's one of the reasons why the Biden administration is doing this now, as well
06:45as a bunch of other measures, is to sort of tie the Trump administration
06:51into the process of sanctions against Russian energy companies.
06:56But, I mean, there are signs coming out of the Trump administration that in order to
07:00get Russia to the table and negotiate on terms that, say, the US, the EU and
07:06Ukraine could accept, that the Trump administration would use sanctions or
07:12at least the threat of additional sanctions to bring Russia to the table.
07:16But I think your analysis is correct.
07:18The long term commitment to sanctions, that's harder to say in terms of the Trump
07:22administration.
07:24Benjamin, great to get your insight.
07:25Thanks so much for joining us here on Prime News Paris.
07:27Good to have you with us.
07:29Thank you very much.

Recommended