Posted on 02/24/2024 5:59:01 AM PST by SpeedyInTexas
“Secret talks of the best defenders of refineries possibly being sent to the front.”
Then one day, everybody gets classified as “best”...
You got mocked for your asinine claim that Europe “REQUIRED” Urals Grade oil.
As well you should be.
Details on Trump’s new direct sanctions on Russia. They will likely produce a near term train wreck for the companies normal logistics, support and administrative systems, and require higher cost workarounds to be developed, while forcing them to offer larger discounts. Wide-ranging impacts on their subsidiaries in many other countries as well. Could put a major dent in seaborne shipments to India and China.
Kyiv Independent (23 Oct):
“Trump’s Russia sanctions ‘a shock’ to Moscow, may deal ‘serious blow’ to oil giants, experts say
“The U.S. imposed sanctions on Russia’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, on Oct. 22, aiming to pressure the Kremlin into agreeing to a ceasefire in Ukraine.
The measures freeze all U.S.-based assets of those companies. They also pave the way for secondary sanctions against foreign institutions that handle transactions with those on the blacklist.
Experts described the move as “quite a shock” and a “serious blow” to Russia’s top oil exporters.
Rosneft and Lukoil are pillars of Russia’s economy. Together, they account for nearly half of the country’s crude-oil exports, around 3.1 million barrels per day, according to Russian estimates.
State-controlled Rosneft, led by Igor Sechin (one of the possible successors of Putin), a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, produces about 40% of Russia’s oil. Lukoil, the country’s largest private energy company, accounts for roughly 15% of the national output and 2% of the global production.
The new sanctions extend far beyond the parent companies, covering six Lukoil subsidiaries and 28 Rosneft enterprises. Among them is Lukoil-Western Siberia, which alone accounts for around 40% of the group’s hydrocarbon production.
Before this latest package, both firms were already under sectoral sanctions that banned U.S. entities from supplying drilling equipment, technology, or services for new Arctic, offshore, or shale projects. The Oct. 22 order, however, effectively blacklists them.
“The Americans imposed sanctions not only on Rosneft and Lukoil but also on all their subsidiaries where these companies hold more than a 50% stake,” said economist Oleh Pendzin, head of the Ukrainian Economic Discussion Club.
“This directly affects European subsidiaries and those in third countries. Their ability to conduct business in these markets is now severely restricted.”
The expert said oil companies rely on a vast ecosystem of logistics, shipping, and insurance.
Once sanctioned, “contractors and intermediaries quickly pull away — no one wants to get involved with a sanctioned entity,” Pendzin added.
The impact is already rippling through global markets. India — one of Russia’s largest buyers — is reportedly expected to sharply curtail its imports.
According to Bloomberg, citing unnamed executives at Indian oil companies, India’s biggest refineries are expected to reduce purchases from Rosneft and Lukoil to virtually zero.
In September, India imported 1.6 million barrels of Russian oil per day, roughly 36% of its total needs. At their peak earlier this year, shipments reached 2 million barrels daily.
“Banks in India and China risk becoming targets of secondary sanctions if they continue working with blacklisted entities.”
For Moscow, India has been the largest market for seaborne oil exports and the second-largest overall buyer after China. The new restrictions threaten to close that crucial outlet.
“The new U.S. sanctions are currently quite a shock for the Russians, and the buyers of Russian oil, especially India,” said Vasily Astrov, senior economist at the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies.
“But experience shows that ways will be found to circumvent these sanctions over the coming months, e.g., by ‘founding’ new shell companies that are not subject to sanctions.”
Astrov added that cheap Russian oil remains attractive to Asian markets.
But as Pendzin noted, “banks in India and China risk becoming targets of secondary sanctions if they continue working with blacklisted entities.”
According to Reuters, Chinese state-owned oil companies have also suspended purchases of seaborne Russian crude following the sanctions, amid fears of potential secondary sanctions.
Will the sanctions bite? Experts say the sanctions might squeeze Russia’s oil sector, at least in the short term.
“Tighter constraints on payments, shipping, and insurance raise costs and deepen discounts, reducing the export tax take for Moscow,” said Oleksandr Talavera, professor of financial economics at the University of Birmingham...
...Putin acknowledged on Oct. 23 that the new U.S. measures would have “consequences.”
“(The sanctions) are serious for us... that’s clear, and they will have certain consequences,” Putin said. “But they will not significantly affect our economic well-being.”
Still, some analysts remain skeptical that the measures will be decisive.
Chatham House associate fellow Timothy Ash told the Kyiv Independent that while the sanctions send a political signal, they may not drastically alter Russia’s revenues.
“The U.K. has already sanctioned these entities,” he said, noting London’s Oct. 15 move to sanction Rosneft and Lukoil in what the U.K. government described as their “strongest sanctions yet.”
“Symbolically, perhaps it will have some effect as it might suggest that the U.S. might be willing to do something more significant going forward,” Ash added.”
...and just like that, it looks like the brief oil price bump after President Trump announced sanctions has peaked, and started back down.
What was that, 2 days? Not even quiet two full days? A tiny short $4 bump.
It is going to cost Rosneft and Lukoil significantly more, for significantly longer.
Last night Rosneft’s big Ryazan refinery was hit and set ablaze. The night before, their refinery in Dagestan. How about tonight, tomorrow and the rest of the Winter?
They are Doomed, because of Putin.

Skip the cheese, and spread on some hopium sauce!
You HAVE to be a government shill - who else would advocate paying more than you have to for oil?>
"No, I refuse to pay 2 bucks a gallon for gasoline, because I don't like the owner. I'll go to the next corner, and pay 5 bucks a gallon. Put that on my .gov credit card. After all, the chumps are picking up the tab - at gunpoint."
“Next Tuesday, of course”
This last Tuesday, Rosneft’s refinery in Dagestan was struck by at least seven Ukrainian drones, setting the facility ablaze, and disabling a critical foreign made cracking tower. Not many of those, Russia doesn’t make them, and Rosneft is under sanctions now, and not allowed to buy them.
No need to wait until the next Tuesday, Rosneft’s next refinery set afire the very next night (Ryazan). It is a few a week now, as the hard Winter approaches. Only a Kremlin shill would pretend to not see that pattern. Or a fool.
Fool or knave? Or both?
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