Russia forced to offer rebates: price per barrel of Russian oil falls below $50

Oil exports are a key part of Russia's government revenue and are a concern at the start of the year.

Russia forced to offer rebates: price per barrel of Russian oil falls below $50

Oil exports are a key part of Russia's government revenue and are a concern at the start of the year. The price per barrel falls below 50 US dollars, although the world market price is increasing. This is due to Western sanctions and discounts that Russia has to grant its customers. The losses could be immense.

According to official information from Moscow, the price of Russian oil fell further in January - to less than 50 US dollars per barrel (159 liters). "The average price of Urals oil in January 2023 was $49.48 per barrel," the Russian Ministry of Finance told the Interfax news agency. This corresponds to almost 60 percent of the price in the same month last year.

In December, the EU and its G7 partners agreed on a price cap for Russian oil in order to minimize Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin's income from his war of aggression against Ukraine, which began almost a year ago.

In December, the price of Russian Urals oil was just over $50 a barrel. In January, Russia was therefore unable to benefit from the recent slight increase in oil prices on the world market because there had to be even more discounts than in December. While the discount compared to the North Sea variety Brent was 38 percent in December, it is now 41 percent.

The price cap on Russian oil set by western industrialized countries is currently 60 dollars per barrel. So $50 is way below that. According to the daily newspaper Kommersant, such an oil price is a problem for the Russian budget. For the current year, the government has expected an average price of $70 per barrel. Should Russia also have to cut oil production by 500,000 to 700,000 barrels a day because of the sanctions, as predicted by Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Nowak, the country could face a loss of income equivalent to almost 39 billion euros, according to "Kommersant".