Energy Oil

Brent jumps above $70 on secondary tariff fears

Photo caption: Oil

 

Donald Trump rattled markets again by threatening secondary sanctions on Russian energy buyers and setting a tighter ceasefire deadline for Moscow, driving Brent crude above $70 as traders also eyed progress on US-China trade talks.

– One of the key tenets of the US-EU trade deal, namely that European countries would buy $750 billion of American energy over the next three years, would be close to impossible to achieve.

– Europe’s total energy imports from the US already totalled slightly south of $80 billion last year, after LNG deliveries ticked in at 36 million tonnes and crude oil supplies soared to a record 74.5 million tonnes.

– Tripling current energy flows would be a Herculean task, with European refining demand handicapped by the closure of four plants in 2025 and regional gas consumption to increase by 1.5% from last year, equivalent to roughly 3 million metric tonnes of incremental LNG.

– The pledge could be further watered down by the EU counting its investments into the US energy sector as part of the $750 billion, as well as Brussels counting new nuclear projects into it even if none of the small nuclear reactors would see daylight this decade.

=== Oilprice.com ===

 

 

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