Featured Gas Oil

Crude rises by 4% as EU proposes Russian oil ban

The prices of crude oil rose by four per cent on Wednesday, after the European Union unveiled plans to phase out imports of Russian oil as part of sanctions for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Brent crude futures rose $3.99, or 3.8 per cent, to $108.96 a barrel by 1121 GMT. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose $4.05, or 4 per cent, to $106.46 a barrel, Reuters reported.

The development came immediately after the European Commission, President Ursula von der Leyen, on Wednesday proposed a phased oil embargo on Russia over its war in Ukraine, as well as sanctioning Russia’s top bank, in a bid to deepen Moscow’s isolation

“Crude oil supply would be phased out within six months, and imports of refined oil products by the end of 2022.”

Russia is the world’s second-biggest crude oil exporter, according to the International Energy Agency.

Reuters quoted SEB chief commodities analyst, Bjarne Schieldrop, as saying “Russian oil is now ‘bad oil’.”

“This energy war of ‘good oil’ versus ‘bad oil’ has just started.”

Investors are also waiting for an announcement from the US Federal Reserve on Wednesday.

It is expected to intensify efforts to bring down high inflation by raising interest rates and reducing its balance sheet.

Presently any increase in oil price will favour Nigeria which relies majorly on oil for its revenue.

Related posts

DisCos advocate CBN-funded massive roll-out of meters to address power challenge

Shile  GIWA 

NNPC to deduct N149bn from FAAC as petrol subsidy

Our Reporter

Blackout hits Soludo, Obi, Uba’s communities, 30 others in Anambra

Our Reporter

Osun Election: ICPC arrests suspected vote buyers

Our Reporter

Bridging gaps in remittances with new solutions

Our Reporter

Apapa gridlock: Maritime workers issue 21-day ultimatum, threaten strike

Our Reporter