
Turns out Washington isn’t buying what Brussels is selling—at least not yet. While the EU is lobbying to lower the G7’s $60-per-barrel price cap on Russian crude to $50 (with Ukraine yelling from the back row for a $30 tag), U.S. officials remain politely unconvinced.
A European official attending the G7 finance powwow in Banff, Canada, told Reuters that the U.S. Treasury team thinks market forces are already doing the heavy lifting. With Brent prices wobbling around $64—and Russia’s Urals blend clocking in at a $10 discount—Washington’s logic is that there’s no need to poke the bear when the bear’s already limping.
But don’t mistake hesitation for a hard no. The U.S. is still at the table, coffee in hand, mulling it over.
The price cap, first introduced in 2022, aims to restrict Russia’s oil revenue by banning Western firms from insuring or financing shipments sold above the cap. In practice, it’s been a bit of a cat-and-mouse game, with Moscow deploying a ghost fleet of tankers that skirt the rules.
The EU, for its part, is tightening the screws. This week, it rolled out its 17th package of sanctions, going after the usual suspects—including Russia’s shadow fleet and Surgutneftegaz. European Commission VP Valdis Dombrovskis confirmed more energy-related sanctions are on the table but gave reporters the classic “no comment” when pressed for details.
So, for now, the cap stays put. But with oil markets jittery from tariff threats and global growth forecasts looking more fragile than a teacup in a thunderstorm, it’s unlikely to be the last word.
Source: By Julianne Geiger from Oilprice.com