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V.Putin: Russia is fine with $60 oil

V.Putin: Russia is fine with $60 oil


Moscow, June 10 - Neftegaz.RU. Russia doesn’t need oil prices to be too high and sees the $60-65 a barrel price - the price at which Brent Crude currently trades - as “quite satisfactory,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said at a meeting with media, Oilprice reported.

“The Russian processing industry itself is not interested in very high oil prices. Well, the average price around $60-65 per barrel is quite satisfactory, we don’t need to drive up [price] to the top, we already have a decent margin, in terms of budget,” TASS quoted Putin as saying at the meeting with heads of news agencies.

Russia’s budget is based on a price of oil at $40 a barrel, the president said, adding that at that price Moscow can replenish its gold and forex reserves.

Russia will consider all factors currently shaping the oil market, including the production declines in Iran and Venezuela and the risk of outages in Nigeria and Libya, as well as demand for crude and refined oil products in the summer, Putin said, but refrained from commenting on what Russia and its OPEC partners should do next.

At the end of November last year, just before OPEC and its Russia-led allies decided to implement another round of production cuts until June this year, Putin said that $60 oil is comfortable enough for Russia.

However, OPEC and Saudi Arabia, the cartel’s de facto leader and key partner of Russia in the OPEC+ deal, are definitely not comfortable with oil prices at $60, as Saudi Arabia needs the price of oil at $85 to balance its budget.

Russia and Putin are not giving away any hints into what the Russian position would be at the next OPEC+ meeting currently scheduled for June 25-26.



Yet, Igor Sechin, the CEO of Rosneft, said earlier this week that the company was in talks with the government for possible compensation for losses in case OPEC+ decides to extend the production cut deal through the end of the year.

Due to the production cuts, Russia’s economy is expected to grow by just 1.2 % in 2019, a downward revision from a previous estimate for 1.5 % growth, the World Bank said this week.

Author: Tsvetana Paraskova


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