The new drive for energy security prompted by the fossil fuel price crisis will accelerate the development of renewable energy, the International Energy Agency has said in a new report.
Russia will not export oil to countries that impose price caps even if production is cut, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said on Russia state TV Sunday.
Russia has rejected a price cap on its oil, indicating it may stop supplying to countries that agree to the limit.
OPEC+ decided not to change the production quotas for its members at its latest meeting, which took place on Sunday.
Oil prices were steady on Monday after an agreement by the G7 group of nations and its allies to cap the price of Russian oil at US$60 a barrel.
As gas prices continue to fall, the coalition of oil-producing nations led by Saudi Arabia and Russia on Sunday opted against trying to stop the slide with cuts to the world’s oil supply.
Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak has warned that the country’s authorities may be prepared to accept a certain decline in oil production — despite the drop in government revenues — in response to the price cap officially agreed late last week by the G7 group of leading economies and Australia.
Major oil-producing countries led by Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed on December 4 to maintain their current output levels in a climate of uncertainty and ahead of fresh sanctions against Moscow coming into force next week.
Earlier this week, oil prices plunged to 2022 lows as energy markets panicked about demand amid COVID chaos in China that has resulted in an unexpected and extraordinary manifestation of street protests and even calls for Chinese President Xi Jinping to step down.
Upstream investment in Russia’s oil and gas sector is set to plunge 30 per cent to $35 billion this year amid sanctions and a mass departure of foreign companies, Rystad Energy said in a report on Thursday.