lya Naymushin / Reuters
Russian energy majors are putting pressure on Western
oil buyers to use euros instead of dollars for payments and introducing penalty
clauses in contracts as Moscow seeks protection against possible new U.S.
sanctions.
Seven industry sources told Reuters that Western oil
majors and trading houses have clashed with Russia's third and fourth biggest
producers, Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegaz, over 2019 oil sales contract terms
during unusually tough annual renegotiation in recent weeks.
The development mirrors a similar stand-off between
Western buyers and Russia's top oil producer, Rosneft.
Earlier this week, trading sources told Reuters that
Rosneft wants Western oil buyers to pay penalties from 2019 if they fail to pay
for supplies in the event that new U.S. sanctions disrupt sales.
Now sources have told Reuters that Surgutneftegaz and
Gazprom Neft have also clashed with their buyers over penalties and the use of
euros and other currencies to replace the dollar in contracts.
"It is part of the same trend - the Russian oil
industry is working on mitigating new sanctions risks. The buyers in turn argue
they cannot carry those risks so we are trying to find compromises," said
one source with a Western buyer involved in negotiations, asking not to be
named as the talks are confidential.
Russia has been under U.S. and EU sanctions since 2014
when it invaded Ukraine's Crimean peninsula. The sanctions have been repeatedly
widened to include new companies and sectors, making it tough for Russian oil
firms to borrow money abroad, raise new capital or develop Arctic and
unconventional deposits.
President Vladimir Putin's administration has been
hoping for a thaw in relations with the United States since President Donald
Trump came to power but Washington has imposed new sanctions instead, including
on some of Russia's richest people.
Russian businesses are preparing for a new wave of
sanctions expected in the coming weeks. The firms are trying to diversify away
from dollar payments and tapping Asia for more of their financing and
technology needs.
According to four industry sources, Surgutneftegaz
asked buyers to be prepared to switch from dollar to euro payments in
contracts, and insisted on buyers being effectively responsible for any losses
arising from sanctions.
"They basically said — sanctions don't matter.
Buyers have to find a way to pay, or to return purchased goods, or pay
penalties," a source with a big trading house said.
Gazprom Neft has also asked buyers to use euros in
payments and bear financial responsibility for contract breaches in the case of
new sanctions, according to three sources.
Gazprom Neft refused to comment. Surgutneftegaz did
not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
"Just like Iran"
Russia supplies over 10 percent of global oil, so
drastic sanctions against it could lead to a steep spike in oil prices.
All global oil majors rely on Russia to feed their refineries,
especially in Europe and Asia, and hence they cannot just walk away from annual
contract negotiations if they are unhappy with terms.
Talks with both Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegaz have
been progressing slowly and painfully, according to trading sources.
Several Western buyers have managed to agreed
compromises with Surgutneftegaz and Gazprom Neft, but others are still in tough
talks with the producers, the sources said.
All Surgutneftegaz's contracts are bespoke and are
negotiated individually in the Siberian town of Surgut by the firm's management
and visiting Western trading bosses.
The sources declined to name companies that have
already reached compromise deals.
In one such compromise, a large European buyer agreed
to the use of euros in payments in exchange for Surgutneftegaz dropping its
demand for penalties from buyers who fail to pay for cargoes.
"We have been arguing that if sanctions make it
impossible to pay for an oil cargo, how on earth are we supposed to pay
penalties," one trading source said.
"So we have agreed that the payment remains
suspended for the entire duration of sanctions — just like it works with
Iran," he added.
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