Putin bans Russian oil exports to countries that impose price cap – National | 24CA News
President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday delivered Russia’s long-awaited response to a Western value cap, signing a decree that bans the provision of crude oil and oil merchandise from Feb. 1 for 5 months to nations that impose the cap.
The Group of Seven main powers, the European Union and Australia agreed this month to a $60-per-barrel value cap on Russian seaborne crude oil efficient from Dec. 5 over Moscow’s “special military operation” in Ukraine.
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The decree, printed on a authorities portal and the Kremlin web site, was introduced as a direct response to “actions that are unfriendly and contradictory to international law by the United States and foreign states and international organizations joining them.”
“Deliveries of Russian oil and oil products to foreign entities and individuals are banned, on the condition that in the contracts for these supplies, the use of a maximum price fixing mechanism is directly or indirectly envisaged,” the decree said, referring particularly to the United States and different overseas states which have imposed the worth cap.
The decree, which features a clause that enables for Putin to overrule the ban in particular circumstances, said: “This…comes into force on Feb. 1, 2023, and applies until July 1, 2023.”
Crude oil exports can be banned from Feb. 1, however the date for the oil merchandise ban can be decided by the Russian authorities and may very well be after Feb. 1.

The value cap, unseen even within the instances of the Cold War between the West and the Soviet Union, is geared toward crippling Russian state coffers and Moscow’s navy efforts in Ukraine.
Finance Minister Anton Siluanov mentioned on Tuesday that Russia’s price range deficit may very well be wider than the deliberate 2% of GDP in 2023, with the oil value cap squeezing export earnings, an additional fiscal hurdle for Moscow because it spends closely on its navy marketing campaign in Ukraine.
However, some analysts have mentioned that the cap could have little rapid influence on the oil revenues that Moscow is at present incomes.
(Reporting by Alexander Marrow and Vladimir Soldatkin; Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by David Evans, Mark Heinrich and Frank Jack Daniel)
