The European Union agreed to a $60-per-barrel (€56.9) price cap on Russian oil, a key step as Western sanctions aim to reorder the global oil market to prevent price spikes and starve President Vladimir Putin of funding for his war in Ukraine.
After a last-minute flurry of negotiations, the EU Presidency, held by the Czech Republic, said in a statement that “ambassadors have just reached an agreement on a price cap for Russian seaborne oil.”
The decision must still be officially approved with a written procedure but is expected to go through.
They needed to set the discounted price that other nations would pay by Monday when an EU embargo on Russian oil shipped by sea and a ban on insurance for those supplies take effect.
The price cap, which was also backed by the G7 countries and Australia, aims to prevent a sudden loss of Russian oil to the world that could lead to a new surge in energy prices and further fuel inflation.
The $60 figure sets the cap near the current price of Russia’s crude, which recently fell below $60 a barrel.
Some criticise that as not low enough to cut into one of Russia's main sources of income.
It is still a big discount to international benchmark Brent, which traded at about $87 (€82.5) per barrel Friday but could be high enough for Moscow to keep selling even while rejecting the idea of a cap.
There is a big risk to the global oil market of losing large amounts of crude from the world’s second-biggest producer. It could drive up gasoline prices for drivers worldwide, which has stirred political turmoil for US President Joe Biden and leaders in other nations.
Europe is already mired in an energy crisis, with governments facing protests over the soaring cost of living while developing nations are even
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