The expert explained the return of Japan to the import of Russian oil

Japan's return to importing Russian oil may be due to the restructuring of trade flows in the oil market, which began after the embargo was imposed by the European Union (EU) in December 2022, Kirill Rodionov, an expert at the Institute for the Development of Technologies in the Fuel and Energy Complex, told Izvestia on February 16.

As he clarified, before the onset of sanctions, Russia was the largest supplier of oil for Europe, and the countries of the Middle East for Japan.

“For example, in 2021, oil imports to the EU amounted to 372.3 million tons of oil (excluding supplies from the UK and Norway): Russia accounted for 27% of them, while the total share of the four largest OPEC producers - Saudi Arabia, Iraq, United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Kuwait - amounted to only 14%, ”the expert noted.

For comparison, Rodionov cited national customs statistics, according to which Japan imported 122.1 million tons of oil in 2021, of which Russia accounted for 4%, and Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait accounted for 83%.

The expert said that the EU embargo was supposed to stimulate the supply of oil from the Middle East to Europe.

“However, at the same time, the OPEC alliance has reduced production quotas by 2 million barrels of oil per day (b / d) since November 2022. Therefore, the expected growth in supplies will occur due to the reorientation of exports of the Middle Eastern OPEC countries from the Asian to the European market. This, in turn, will encourage consumers in Asia to increase imports of Russian raw materials: according to the International Energy Agency, Russian oil exports to China increased from 1.8 million b/d in December 2022 to 2.1 million b/d in January 2023,” Rodionov explained.

Earlier in the day, the Japanese Ministry of Finance published a report on its website, according to which the country purchased a small amount of oil from the Russian Federation in January for the first time in five months. Compared to January 2022, Russian oil imports decreased by 76%.

Since December 5 last year, there has been an embargo on oil supplied by sea from the Russian Federation to the European Union. At the same time, the European Union set an adjustable ceiling for the cost of such oil at $60 per barrel.

On December 23 last year, Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Alexander Novak, in an interview with the Rossiya 24 TV channel, expressed the opinion that energy resources from the Russian Federation will invariably be in demand in the global economic system.

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