Can the World Live Without Russian Oil?

Russia’s power on the world stage is supported by its vast reserves of oil and gas. Since the invasion of Ukraine, Western countries have stepped up sanctions, including initial efforts to ban some of Russia’s oil exports. But expanding and enforcing an oil embargo will have wide-ranging consequences—on all sides.

The Western world stands aghast at the suffering of the Ukrainian people. The global economic consequences of the conflict could also be severe, because Russia and Ukraine are major exporters of vital commodities. For Western democracies, applying pressure to halt the conflict will likely come at a cost, because Russia is the world’s third largest oil producer—accounting for 12% of global oil output. While a ban on Russian oil will hurt the invader’s biggest source of revenue, its effectiveness depends on solidarity from Western countries in the face of economic hardship and risks of escalating the conflict.

Russia’s Invasion Highlights Western Vulnerability

Oil markets were already undersupplied before the outbreak of war; now they are heading further into deficit. In Western European countries, environmental legislation and regulation has discouraged supply growth of oil and gas in the private sector, while in the US a higher cost of capital and a focus on higher returns has also constrained new supply. The result? Tighter and more volatile markets. Given these constraints, if Russian oil disappears from the market, it will be very hard to find enough new sources of supply in the near term to plug the gap and prevent oil prices from rising sharply.

Oil Embargo Begins to Take Effect

The US and UK have announced oil embargos, with the US ban immediately effective on March 8 and the UK planning to phase out Russian oil imports by the end of this year. Both countries import relatively little Russian oil as a percentage of their total energy mix, so their actions appear largely symbolic. To be fully effective, many more countries would need to join the embargo, particularly Europeans, who rely much more on Russian supply.

But meanwhile, big global corporate oil buyers such as BP and ENI are wary of violating an embargo, so they have started to self-sanction. While they continue to buy the Russian oil they have already contracted for, they are not renewing contracts for future delivery. Seaborne exports from Russia to the OECD have already been cut in half, while Urals crude is trading at around a US$25 per barrel discount to Brent, compared with just US$4 in February. And the price of diesel—which is vital for commercial transportation and machinery—is reflecting actual shortage. Can European governments bring clarity to a confused and deteriorating situation?