Russia’s Oil Revenue Soars Despite Sanctions, Study Finds
Rising oil prices more than offset a decline in export
volumes during the first 100 days of the assault on Ukraine.
June 13, 2022
https://archive.ph/eykD8#selection-474.1-497.13
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered global
condemnation and tough sanctions aimed at denting Moscow’s war chest. Yet
Russia’s revenues from fossil fuels, by far its biggest export, soared to
records in the first 100 days of its war on Ukraine, driven by a windfall from
oil sales amid surging prices, a new analysis shows.
Russia earned what is very likely a record 93 billion
euros in revenue from exports of oil, gas, and coal in the first 100 days of the
country’s invasion of Ukraine, according to
data analyzed by the Center for Research on
Energy and Clean Air, a research organization based in Helsinki, Finland. About
two-thirds of those earnings, the equivalent of about $97 billion, came from
oil, and most of the remainder from natural gas.
“The current rate of revenue is unprecedented, because
prices are unprecedented, and export volumes are close to their highest levels
on record,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, an analyst who led the center’s research.
Fossil fuel exports have been a key enabler of
Russia’s military buildup. In 2021, revenue from oil and gas alone made up 45
percent of Russia’s federal budget, according to
the International Energy Agency. The revenue from Russia’s fossil fuel exports
exceeds what the country is spending on its war in Ukraine, the research center
estimated, a sobering finding as momentum
shifts in Russia’s favor as its forces focus on
important regional targets amid a weapons shortage among Ukrainian soldiers.
Ukrainian officials again called on countries and
firms to halt their trade with Russia completely. “We’re asking the world to do
everything possible in order to cut off Putin and his war machine from all
possible financing, but it’s taking much too long,” Oleg Ustenko, an economic
adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, said in an interview from
Kyiv.
Ukraine has also been tracking Russia’s exports, and
Mr. Ustenko described the research center’s numbers as seeming on the
conservative side. Still, the underlying finding was the same, he said: Fossil
fuels continue to fund Russia’s war. “You can stop importing Russian caviar and
Russian vodka, and that’s good, but definitely not enough. You need to stop importing Russian
oil,” he said.
Though Russia’s fossil fuel exports have started to
fall somewhat by volume, as more countries and companies shun trading with
Moscow, surging prices have more than canceled out the effects of that decline.
The research found Russia’s export prices for fossil fuels have been on average
around 60 percent higher than last year, even accounting for the fact that
Russian oil is fetching about 30 percent below international market prices.
Europe, particularly, has struggled to wean itself
from Russian energy, even as many countries send military aid to Ukraine. The
European Union made the most progress in reducing its imports of natural gas from
Russia, buying 23 percent less in the first 100 days of the invasion than the
same period the previous year. Still, the Center for Research on Energy and Clean Air found that income at Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned gas giant, remained about twice as high as the year before, thanks to higher gas prices.
The European Union also reduced its imports of Russian
crude oil, which declined 18 percent in May. But that dip was made up by India
and the United Arab Emirates, leading to no net change in Russia’s oil export
volumes, the research showed. India has become a significant importer of
Russian crude oil, buying 18 percent of the country’s exports over the 100-day
period.
The United States has made a dent in Russia’s
earnings, banning all Russian fossil fuel imports. Still, the United States is
importing refined oil products from countries like the Netherlands and India
that most likely contain Russian crude, a loophole for oil from Russia to make
its way to America.
Overall, China was the largest importer of Russian
fossil fuels over the 100-day period, edging out Germany, Italy, and the
Netherlands. China imported the most oil; Japan was the top purchaser of
Russian coal.
Stricter bans are coming. Late last month, the E.U.
agreed to an embargo that will cover roughly three-quarters of Russian oil
shipped to the region, though that won’t be enforced for six months. Britain
has said it will also phase out imports of Russian oil by year’s end. But
Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, which receive Russian oil via pipelines,
remain exempt. European and United States-owned ships also continue to
transport Russian oil.
Europe is also speeding up its transition away from
fossil fuels altogether. A new E.U. target aims to increase the region’s share
of electricity from renewable forms of energy to 63 percent by 2030, up from a
previously expected target of 55 percent.
Janet Yellen, the United States Treasury secretary,
said last week that Washington was in talks with its European allies about
forming a cartel that would set a cap on the price of Russian oil roughly equal
to the price of production. That would trim Russia’s fossil fuel revenues while
also keeping Russian oil flowing to global markets, stabilizing prices and
fending off a global recession, she told the
Senate Finance Committee.
Mr. Ustenko, the Ukrainian economic aide, said he
would welcome such a move as a temporary measure until full embargoes can be
imposed. He also suggested that countries should take the difference between
global prices and the capped price on Russian oil and pay it into a fund to aid
Ukrainian reconstruction.
“Then we’ll be able to cut off Russians from much of
their financing, and almost immediately,” he said.
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