Russia pockets $24bn from selling energy to China, India
China spent $18.9bn and India $5.1bn on Russian
oil and gas in just three months following the invasion of Ukraine.
By Dan Murtaugh and Debjit Chakraborty
Published On
6 Jul 2022
https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2022/7/6/russia-pockets-24b-from-selling-energy-to-china-india
Russia has pocketed $24 billion from selling energy to
China and India in just three months following its invasion of Ukraine, showing
how higher global prices limit efforts by the US and Europe to punish
President Vladimir Putin.
China spent $18.9 billion on Russian oil, gas, and coal
in the three months to the end of May, almost double the amount a year earlier, the latest customs data show. Meanwhile, India shelled out $5.1 billion in the same
period, more than five times the value of a year ago. That’s an extra $13
billion in revenue from both countries compared to the same months in 2021.
The higher spending is helping make up for decreased
purchases from the US and some other nations that have halted or slowed buying
to punish Russia for the war. The bans have sent prices for alternative
supplies soaring and spurred crippling inflation that threatens to send major
economies into recession.
“China is already buying essentially everything that
Russia can export via pipelines and Pacific ports,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead
analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, who has been
tracking Russian energy flows since the war broke out. “India has been the main
buyer of the cargoes out of the Atlantic that Europe doesn’t want anymore.”
That spree is unlikely to end anytime soon, with
energy prices much higher than they were at this time last year, even
accounting for the steep discounts to global benchmarks Russia is offering to
entice purchasers. On a volume basis, China’s imports continued a slow uptick
in June, while India may have an incentive to boost purchases even further in the
coming months as a European Union ban on Russian oil takes effect, Myllyvirta
said.
China and India still trail Europe as a bloc in terms
of overall sales this year, according to Myllyvirta’s research. However, Europe’s purchases will continue to shrink as import bans on coal and
oil come into effect and as Russia cuts off gas supplies to some European
buyers.
Russia has long-standing trade and strategic relationships
with China and India, and offering steep price discounts is also
accepting payments in local currency to help keep trade flows to the countries
strong this year.
China is the world’s biggest energy importer and has
dedicated pipelines for Siberian oil and gas. Even as its energy consumption
was curbed over the first half of 2022 — partly due to Covid-19 lockdowns — it
spent far more on Russian energy due to higher prices and slight increases in
volumes.
India’s increase in spending after the war has been
far more dramatic, as it doesn’t share a land border with Russia and its ports usually are too far away for cost-efficient shipping. The country spent $8.8
billion on petroleum and coal imports from Feb. 24 to June 30, more than it
doled out for all Russian goods for the entire year in 2021, according to a
trade ministry official, who requested anonymity as the data is not public.
India’s trade ministry spokesperson did not comment.
In addition to big jumps in oil and coal, India also
imported three cargoes of Russian liquefied natural gas since the war began,
compared to one in the same period last year, according to Bloomberg
ship-tracking data.
“Historically, India has taken very little Russian
oil, but the war in Ukraine and Russian-origin oil embargoes by the Europe
Union has led to a rebalancing in oil trade flows,” Wei Cheong Ho, a Rystad
Energy analyst, said in a research note last month.
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