WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Group of Seven nations should soon announce the price cap on Russian oil exports and the coalition will probably adjust the level a few times a year rather than monthly, a senior U.S. Treasury official said on Tuesday.
The G7, including the United States, and the EU is slated to begin implementing the price cap on sea-borne exports of Russian oil on Dec. 5, to punish Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine. The aim is to reduce petroleum revenues for Russia’s war machine while maintaining flows of its oil to global markets and preventing price spikes. A cap on exports of Russian oil products is slated to begin on Feb. 5.
The Treasury official told reporters the European Union is consulting with members on the price cap. “Our hope is that they will finish that consultation relatively soon and put us in a position where our entire coalition can announce a price,” the official said.
The G7 price cap would allow companies to provide services including insurance, shipping and financing on Russian oil imports to coalition members, so long as the purchase of that petroleum is under the price cap. The cap is meant to provide a relief valve to Western bans on Russian oil exports.
The coalition has agreed to set a fixed price on Russian oil rather than a floating rate, discounted to an oil price index, sources said this month.
The official said Washington does not expect Russia to retaliate by withholding oil exports, as Russian President Vladimir Putin has warned would happen. Such a move could send global oil prices higher, but risks damaging Russian oil fields.
“We have no reason to expect that they would do that because, ultimately, it’s not in their interest,” the Treasury official said. As the EU and the United States have put in place bans on Russian energy imports, big buyers including China and India have scooped up Russian oil at discounted prices.
“Any action they take to drive up prices would have an impact on their new customers, customers like India and China who they (Russia) want to remain oil customers going forward,” the U.S. official said.
(Reporting by David Lawder, Timothy Gardner and Daphne Psaledakis; Editing by David Gregorio)