Russia’s budget has benefited from the higher oil prices over the last couple of years since the so-called OPEC+ production cuts entered into force, top Russian officials have said.
The NWF saw its reserves double from $65 billion (4.04 trillion Russian rubles) to $124.4 billion (7.7 trillion rubles) last year, Dmitriev told TASS. The Russian budget - excluding the NWF - received an additional $113 billion (7 trillion rubles) during the years in which the deal has been in force, he added.
“This largely indicates that the NWF resources through the fiscal rule have come exactly from the OPEC+ deal, increasing our reserves twofold,” Dmitriev said.
The investments the NWF plans for various projects of national importance “are mainly the investment of extra money Russia has earned on account of the OPEC+ deal,” Dmitriev told TASS.
Removing condensate from the level of compliance - a concession Russia won at the December OPEC+ meeting - would make Russia’s compliance record look more acceptable to OPEC’s leader and key partner in the deal, Saudi Arabia, which is pushing for all rogue producers in the pact to fall in line with their quotas.
Author: Tsvetana Paraskova




