COMMENT: Non-Western tankers carry most of Russian crude exports, G7 oil price cap fails

COMMENT: Non-Western tankers carry most of Russian crude exports, G7 oil price cap fails
/ bne IntelliNews
By bne IntelliNews October 13, 2023

Three-fifths of Russia's seaborne crude exports are now being shipped by tankers not required to comply with the G7 oil price cap, according to S&P Global data, as the oil price cap sanctions are increasingly seen to have failed.

Nearly 2mn barrels per day (bpd), or 60%, of Russian crude exports were shipped on tankers owned by companies registered outside the G7 in September and not insured by Western P&I Clubs, the main mechanism for enforcing the oil price cap rule that bars tankers from carrying Russian oil that costs more than $60, introduced on December 5, according to S&P Global Commodities at Sea and Maritime Intelligence Risk Suite.

In order to avoid the sanctions Russia has expanded its “ghost fleet” of tankers that operate outside Western insurance schemes, which allows them to ignore the sanctions. Many of these ships were bought from Greek shipping companies and are typically well past their “sell-by date,” causing some to raise the spectre of an environmental disaster waiting to happen, should one of Russia’s ageing tankers sink.

Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) and Kyiv School of Economics (KSE) have also documented widespread cases of EU-flagged tankers simply ignoring the sanctions, especially in the Pacific Ocean, where the ships, many of which are Greek, do not sail through EU-controlled waters.

S&P Global’s analysis shows the total share of non-Western tankers moving Russian crude already stood at 48% of total exports by November 2022, a month before the price cap came into effect, but since then the share has risen to 60%.

Pre-war Western P&I Clubs covered about 95% of all tanker insurance, suggesting cutting companies off from Western insurance would be an effective enforcement tool. The reality is that Russian insurance companies have stepped in to insure non-Western tankers that have vastly expanded those ships that can operate outside the sanctions regime but still have the obligatory insurance to enter ports.

The US-led price cap was designed both to limit revenue for Moscow and to keep Russian oil flowing to the global market. While Russia’s oil revenues fell sharply in the first quarter of this year, they have rapidly recovered in the second half of this year, as predicted by Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, and Russia is on track to easily meet its 2% of GDP budget deficit target this year, “or less,” Siluanov said at a conference last week. “The worst is over,” Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin told the same conference.

"All along we had expected Russia to take countermeasures to try to circumvent the price gap," said Ben Harris, vice president and director of the Economic Studies programme at the Brookings Institution, adding that amassing grey tonnage would be one of the measures, S&P Global reports.

Based on risk consultancy Windward's estimates, 2,452 tankers were confirmed to be or potentially involved in sanctioned trades and could operate outside the price cap as of early October, up from 855 tankers in January 2022, S&P Global said in a note.

“The price cap does not directly target grey tankers but G7-based shipping insurance and marine service providers, alongside coalition members, have come under increasing political pressure in recent months as Russia's main export crudes continue to trade above the $60 per barrel threshold set by them last year,” S&P Global reports.

 

 

1023 Russia OOTT majority of Russian crude exports outside the oil price cap S&P

As most of Russia’s oil exports now operate outside the sanctions regime that means rather than reducing the Kremlin’s income, it is benefiting from the full economic benefits of the rising cost of crude. Both Russia and OPEC have instituted voluntary production cuts that have pushed the cost of Brent up over $90, and those cuts were extended at the start of October until at least the start of next year.

“Russian Urals crude oil prices on an FOB Primorsk basis have been above $60/bbl since July 11, according to Platts assessments by S&P Global Commodity Insights, but nearly half of the grade's exports were still facilitated by companies with Western links last month,” S&P Global said.

For Russia's ESPO grade from the Pacific coast, which has generally traded above the threshold since last December, Western tankers' share still reached 24% in September.

"There must be a large-scale violation of the oil price cap," said Isaac Levi, an analyst at the think-tank Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, as cited by S&P Global. "There is a low perceived risk of being found guilty of violating measures ... The enforcement agencies perhaps do not have the capacity."

Currently, tanker firms and insurers must obtain attestations from their clients that the barrels are sold within the threshold, but they do not need to verify them.

"Russian sellers ... affiliated with Russian oil majors [and] traders likely provide attestations to shipping and insurance companies that do not reflect the actual price, which may be defined as attestations fraud," Kyiv School of Economics said in a research note last month.

American rhetoric holds that the oil price cap is working, but its efficacy is increasingly being questioned in public. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently told the Wall Street Journal that the US would "very likely" start enforcement on Western companies failing to comply with the rules.

"My guess is that over the next three to six months, you'll see tougher enforcement," Harris told S&P Global. "You'll start to see at least a handful of regulatory enforcement actions for outright fraud."

The EU is currently debating a twelfth sanctions package that will focus on better enforcing existing sanctions rather than on imposing new ones, with the exception of possibly sanctioning Russia’s diamond trade for the first time.

However, some analysts have said that the US is nervous about enforcing the oil price sanctions too vigorously for fear of constraining supplies of crude too much and pushing the price of oil even higher – especially ahead of the US presidential elections next year. Moreover, many players have called for the cap to be reduced from $60 to $30, which again is largely currently being ignored for the same reasons.

 

1023 Russia OOTT ESPO, Sokol crude exports dominated by non price cap trade S&P

Aside from preventing Western firms from violating the price cap, coalition members also need to constrain the grey fleet's growth to limit Russian oil exports, according to some analysts.

"The price cap has been unenforced to date," said Jim Burkhard, head of research for oil markets at S&P Global. "We do not expect meaningful enforcement to take place if the war in Israel is seen as pushing oil prices higher."

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