There has been no effect from the price cap sanction as prices have remained low. The restrictions on shipping facilities have had a small effect. The main impacts of the sanctions has been the EU ban on imports, requiring Russia to sell their refined oil to distant markets.
February to March 2023 Russian produced diesel was reported to be selling for around $75 per barrel in February. Exports by sea of Russian oil products fell 10.4% from 11.781m tons in January to 9.531m tons in February. Albania arrested the Russian captain and seized the Liberian registered oil tanker, “Grace Felix”, trying to deliver 22,500 tons of Marine Gasoil 1000 PPM, worth Euro 40million, believed to be Russian fuel transferred ship to ship. The captain was released in December 2023 with no charges against him. Russia has lost their EU market and has been trying to find alternate destinations for refined oil. 3m barrels of clean refined products to Central and South America, up from 1.3m, with Morocco also increasing purchases of diesel. Russia has shipped by rail 30,000 tons of diesel and other refined fuels to Iran this year, opening a new trade. Turkey increased their buying by 50% and bought 10m barrels of diesel in March. Russia is planning on reducing refined oil output.
April to June 2023 Russian exports of clean petroleum product (CPP) to Europe from the Baltic have fallen from over 700,000bpd to just over 100,000bpd. The products are now being shipped on longer journeys, with Turkey, Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East each taking around 100,000bpd more than in 2021 or 2022 tying up clean shipping and undercutting in price of the world market for these products. Russian exports of diesel and gasoil were down again, by 21% to 3.1m tonnes in May. Russian tax revenue on crude and oil products in May fell 31% to 425.8 billion rubles. In June refineries were processing 5.4m bpd.
July to September 2023 In July, the European and G7 shipping industry transported 65% of Russian refined oil products. In 2023, Turkey has been buying 24% of Russian refined oil, China 12% and Saudi Arabia 10%. In late July 2023 the price for Russian diesel, for the first time, topped the price of $100 per barrel price cap level, having risen 50% since early May. This will be seen as a test of the effectiveness of the sanctions and whether tankers previously carrying refined products for Russia will drop out of the market, tankers being paid a premium price to transport Russian refined products. In September Russia imposed a ban on the export of diesel and petrol, partially lifted in October after 3 weeks to allow seaborne exports. In August the Monitoring Group of the Black Sea Institute of Strategic Studies identified three tankers carrying 563,843 tons, that made direct voyages from Russia to ports of EU countries carrying petroleum products, naming them
Athina M who sailed to Antwerp,
Janaki who unloaded in Rouen and
Hamsi to Piraeus, in breach of sanctions. In September six further tankers carrying 197,858 tons were identified,
Happy Lady and
Hamsi to Greece,
New Ranger to Spain,
Mersey to Belgium,
San Sebastian to Croatia and
Yash to the US, breaching sanctions by sailing directly from Russia.
October to December 2023 December saw 3.5 million tons of Russian petroleum products on 123 tankers leave the Black Sea. Storms in November 2023 saw just 2.5 million tons on 96 tankers in the Black Sea. In October 109 tankers transported 3.1 million tons of Russian petroleum products from Russian Black Sea ports, compared to 3.9 million tons on 132 tankers in September and 3.5 million tons on 133 tankers in August. In December Russia agreed to provide OPEC+ with more data on refined oil products, Russia having previously declared such information a state secret. OPEC+ having had experienced difficulty understanding changes in production from the 30 large and 80 small refineries in Russia, which process over 5m bpd of crude. 2023 production of oil products in Russia fell 11.5% to 123 million tons, compared to 2022, attributed to sanctions and low European demand.
January to March 2024 In January the product tanker
Marlin Luanda, carrying Russian naphtha, was hit in the
Gulf of Aden by a
Houthi rebel missile and set on fire. ==See also==