The past two weeks have been a wild ride in the energy markets. Policymakers appear to have started to contemplate the fact that their sanctions on Russia are poorly designed and potentially self-destructive. This has led them to consider alternatives.
It all started with an interview given by President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen to MSNBC last week. In the interview, von der Leyen laid out in impressive detail why energy sanctions against Russia were self-defeating. She explained that if the EU cut off their oil imports from Russia, then the prices of oil might rise, and Russia could sell the oil for more money in other markets.
At this point, it seemed that the European Commission economists caught on to the fact that both the quantity of goods sold and their price matter in energy markets. But earlier this week, the EU — and with them von der Leyen — appear to have reversed their stance once again. The EU announced that it would be undertaking a ‘partial embargo’ of Russian oil imports, and von der Leyen was soon tweeting her support.
It remains to be seen if this embargo is serious. If it is not, the EU has figured out a way to run the Russian oil via alternative channels — probably via Hungary, who has been given a carve-out. But if the Europeans cut off Russian oil supplies, the continent will face further inflation and a deepening cost-of-living crisis that no politician will be able to control.
The real threat to Russia comes not from the EU, but OPEC. OPEC came out this week and announced that they would consider pumping more oil into the markets. The nature of the announcement makes it look like a negotiated agreement between OPEC and NATO. OPEC argues that since Russia is not able to supply energy markets due to the embargoes, OPEC will have to step up to the plate.
This leaves open the possibility that OPEC could use the opportunity to flood the oil market and drive the price down. This would genuinely hurt the Russians economically, but it is not clear that OPEC have either the will or the means to crash the oil price.
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SubscribeOne overlooked reason for this madness is the push to make fossil fuel prices sky high in order to make alternative energy sources more competitive, which supposedly will stave off the myth of the impending climate catastrophe.
I remember around the time all this started, an unnamed Obama-era official was quoted as saying “Russia is incredibly unimportant in the world economy apart from oil and gas,” which even then seemed to me like the sort of thing only a person in love with his own intelligence would be foolish enough to think.
I suppose in a few months we’ll be treated to the revelation that Germany’s inevitable claims of having weaned itself off Russian oil will were based on importing ‘Hungarian’ oil instead.
We’ve been telling OPEC that we’re going to put them out of business as soon as we can. I don’t think we should expect any favours from them.
Predicting future oil prices is a mug’s game. There are too many imponderables. But some trends and facts stick out:
I wouldn’t worry about oil prices. All disruptions are temporary. Eventually, we’ll be back to the average.
Brilliant but irrealistic : OPEC loves high prices as much as Russia does. Their ambiguous courting of both Russia and the US, coupled with the fear of the latter to alienate the cheiks will lead again and again to wishy-washy half and useless measures.
There’s also the issue of refining capacity. I’ve read that there simply isn’t enough refining capacity in the US (I don’t know about elsewhere) to produce a lot of gasoline etc rapidly even if crude oil output increases substantially.
Politicians have a few more months to grandstand but then autumn, and soon winter, will arrive and energy demands will spike. Then Europeans’ willingness to sacrifice for Ukraine (or maintain a proxy war against Russia) will be tested.
Absolutely the case, as is with electricity. We simply don’t have the capacity to produce what is needed at the moment. That’s why suddenly injecting $5 trillion into any economy causes inflation.