EU ban on Russian oil products could be counterproductive for energy markets: Experts

EU countries are set to impose Sunday a ban on Russian seaborne oil products, along with a global price cap to exert more pressure on Moscow’s revenue stream, but industry experts fear the move could be counterproductive and have a profound impact on European energy markets compared to a similar ban on Russian crude oil in December, as the bloc imports almost half of its diesel from Russia.

According to the sanctions, scheduled as part of the sixth sanctions package agreed last June, EU and G7 countries will stop buying Russian refined products such as diesel, gas oil, and fuel oil.

A price cap of $100 per barrel on premium Russian oil products such as diesel and a $45 per barrel on discounted products like fuel oil will also come into effect the same day.

Western insurance and shipping companies will be prohibited from insuring or carrying cargoes of Russian oil products unless they were bought at or below the caps.

Ursula von der Leyen, head of the European Commission, said the price caps aim to cut Russia’s revenue "while ensuring stable global energy markets."

Western governments will also review the $60 per barrel cap on Russian crude oil intended to impede the international circulation of Russian crude oil sales. The sanctions have so far failed to have the desired impact as the market price for Russian oil has remained significantly below this price ceiling.

In retaliation, Russia imposed a ban on oil supplies to countries and companies that comply with the price caps.

The decision which came into effect on Feb. 1 prohibits the supply of Russian crude oil and oil products "at all stages" if contracts directly or indirectly abide by the price cap. The ban will remain in place for five months.

Oil price spikes can cast shadow on Western sanctions

"The price cap seems to be working, but it’s working for the wrong reasons," Julien Mathonniere, an oil markets economist at Energy Intelligence Group, told Anadolu.

He said deals for Russian crude are effectively being done under the fixed price of $60 per barrel, however, "not due to buyers adhering to the cap itself” but “because the free-floating price of Russian Urals is constrained by sanctions and the resulting market dynamics."

Carole Nakhle, CEO of research and training company Crystol Energy, said the ban and cap aimed to curtail Russian revenues could be considered successful only if they end up with intended consequences on Russia's economic growth.

She pointed to a recent forecast released by the IMF, which said the Russian economy is projected to grow 0.3% in 2023 despite a raft of Western sanctions. This was a massive jump from the -2.3% contraction estimated in October.

"However, there is one more dimension to these measures," Nakhle warned. "Avoid oil price spikes. If you do, they (sanctions) will be successful."

Profund impact and EU’s cautious stockpiling

Mathonniere believes that the forthcoming ban on Russian oil products and price cap will have a profound impact, but it may not be immediate due to product stockpiling.

"Data is showing product inventories build-ups, not only in Europe but now in the US too. This market has gotten ahead of itself and accumulated so much product inventory so fast that the ICE low-sulfur gasoil futures are falling," he said.

He argued that prices would normally go up, and warned that over the long term, Europe needs to find just over 1 million barrels per day (bpd) of alternative product supplies, nearly half of which is diesel.

Nakhle, however, was cautious to predict possible impacts of the ban, saying: "It is too early to tell as usually the impact, if any, takes time to become more visible. There is a good chance that the impact will be limited given the nature of oil trade - be it crude or products."

‘Europe may face a diesel deficit’

Nakhle confirmed that diesel would be impacted more as it is more fragile in supply terms. "Without diesel, some economies cannot simply function," he said.

According to Mathonniere, about 500,000 bpd of Europe's products imports from Russia consisted of ultra-low-sulfur diesel (ULSD), which is considered the region’s "Achilles' heel" in terms of product supply.

Russia accounted for almost half of EU-27 diesel imports last year or approximately 10% of the bloc’s overall diesel consumption, he noted.

"Europe may face a diesel deficit," he said, warning about the prospect of higher-for-longer prices and economic pain for European motorists, businesses, and agriculture.

"It also threatens to push the entire oil complex higher. There is speculation the EU may exempt some diesel imports from Russia, as it did with crude. And there is also talk that some traders may try to re-export Russian diesel from non-EU countries to Europe," he added.

If Russia curtails its supply in the face of the bans, possible oil price spikes "depend on whether that supply disappears from the global market or simply redirected to other buyers," Nakhle said.

The lack of diesel supply in Europe, according to Mathonniere, will lead to potential price increases.

"We forecast a $10-$20 move higher, which is when there will be a larger spotlight on OPEC+. We see $90-$100 return in the next 3-6 months, but a much lower ceiling compared to 2022," he said.

Mathonniere went on to predict that OPEC+ may try to dampen prices and tame volatility, "especially if sizeable amounts of Russian oil are removed from the market in a sustained way."

Source: Anadolu Agency

Rally in Bangladesh protests gas price hike, demand resignation of prime minster

Nearly 100,000 leaders and activists from Bangladesh’s main opposition party rallied Saturday in central Dhaka to protest the hike in gas prices and other commodities and to demand the restoration of an election-time caretaker government.

“This movement is for ensuring people’s right to vote and restoring democracy, ousting the fascist Awami League government,” Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) Secretary-General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir told the crowd.

He alleged that the Awami League captured power through a sham election and turned the country into a state of looters and money launderers.

“Whenever Awami League comes to power, they snatch people’s democratic rights and try to turn the country into a one-party nation as they did in 1975,” said Alamgir.

BNP workers chanted slogans against the hike in gas prices, daily commodities and also human rights violations, including enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings, with protesters rounding their foreheads with the national flag.

Party leaders also claimed that in recent months more than one dozen BNP leaders and activists, who were vocal against the unbearable price hike of daily commodities, have been killed by police under directions by the government while others have been victims of enforced disappearances.

Human Rights Watch Saturday urged authorities on Saturday to investigate recent allegations of enforced disappearances and torture, including by members of the police detective branch.

The UN Committee Against Torture described Bangladesh police as a “state within a state, in a review in July 2019.

Citing the previous two national elections in 2014 and 2018 under the administration of Sheikh Hasina as the worst in the history of Bangladesh, BNP leaders warned that no further election would be allowed without the nonpartisan caretaker government.

They alleged that due to the misrule of the Awami League government, huge money has been laundered abroad, putting the economic condition of the country in danger.

Meanwhile, Ganatantra Mancha, an alliance of seven parties, announced Saturday a march and mass campaign program Feb. 11 for the resignation of the Awami League government and holding elections under a neutral government.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Sweden ‘deliberately’ endangering its NATO bid by allowing terrorist provocations: Turkish top diplomat

Stockholm is "deliberately" stepping on mines laid out by terrorists on its path to NATO membership, the Turkish foreign minister said on Saturday, referring to recent terrorist provocations in Sweden.

"Terrorist organizations are laying mines ... and Sweden is deliberately stepping on them. They can clear them if they want," Cavusoglu said in the southern Turkish province of Antalya.

On provocations of terrorist groups targeting Türkiye and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Sweden, Cavusoglu said: "It is for Sweden to decide whether to clear the mines or step on them. If you step on them, they will explode."

Terrorist organizations are "roaming in your country," he said, adding that if Sweden fulfills its commitments made in a tripartite memorandum for NATO accession, "we will sit down, talk and keep our word."

Sweden and Finland formally applied to join NATO last May, a decision spurred by Russia’s war on Ukraine.

But Türkiye – a NATO member for more than 70 years – voiced objections, accusing the two countries of tolerating and even supporting terrorist groups including the PKK and the Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO), the group behind the July 15, 2016 coup attempt in Türkiye.

Last June, Türkiye and the two Nordic countries signed a memorandum at a NATO summit to address Ankara's legitimate security concerns, paving the way for their eventual membership in the alliance.

In the memorandum, Sweden and Finland agreed not to provide support to terror groups such as the PKK and its offshoots, and FETO, and to extradite terror suspects to Türkiye, among other steps.

But Turkish officials say the countries, particularly Sweden, have yet to take the necessary steps against terrorism.

Talks on the Nordic membership bids stalled after recent provocative demonstrations and Quran burnings in Stockholm.

Ankara has also hinted at considering Finland’s NATO membership application separately from that of Sweden.

Consulate closures

Criticizing the recent closure of some Western consulates in Istanbul, the top diplomat said: "If you do not take a step back, we will take the necessary steps" by summoning ambassadors to the Foreign Ministry.

"They say they received information on security threats. If you do not share the information with us, we look for the intent behind this and we know that these actions are deliberate," Cavusoglu said.

"We even know that some ambassadors are calling others to join the move. We summoned them to the ministry. We have made the necessary warnings. We said that we know what you want to do, and you are trying to show Türkiye as unstable," he said.

Cavusoglu's remarks came a day after Türkiye summoned ambassadors of Western countries, including the US, to criticize their decision to temporarily shut diplomatic missions and issue security alerts following recent burnings in Europe of Islam's holy book the Quran.

The ambassadors of Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK were also summoned to the Foreign Ministry, according to Turkish diplomatic sources, who were told that such simultaneous acts do not show a proportional and prudent approach, but instead serve the "insidious agenda of terrorist groups."

Source: Anadolu Agency

Civilians bore the brunt of 1,425-day Sarajevo siege

Thousands of civilians in Bosnia and Herzegovina were a target of countless massacres during the siege of Sarajevo amid the Bosnian War between 1992 and 1995.

Sarajevo was exposed to daily bombings and mortar attacks by Bosnian Serb troops for 1,425 days.

Shoppers in markets, people waiting in the queue for bread, children playing in schoolyards – civilians, no matter who they were or what they did – were targeted indiscriminately.

The bloodiest massacres took place in the Markale marketplace, whose 29th anniversary will be marked on Sunday.

The bombardment on Feb. 5, 1994, took the lives of 68 people and injured nearly 150.

Meanwhile, on Aug. 28, 1995, a second mortar exploded in the main market square, killing 43 people and injuring 75.

Victims everywhere

Besides the Markale massacres, thousands of civilians trying to meet their daily needs in the besieged capital became victims to the attacks.

On June 26, 1993, as many as seven children, who were playing on the Bakareva street in Bistrik district, were killed in firing from mountains where Serb forces were stationed.

While many perished in attacks on streets in the Dobrinja 3 district, others died when mortar shells hit funerals.

On May 27 in 1992, civilians were hit with mortar shells when they were waiting in queues to get free bread on the Vase Miskina street in Ferhadija district. Twenty-six people were killed, and 108 others hurt.

Residents on the Halaci street in the historical Ottoman bazaar Bascarsija were also among the victims of mortar shells. On Aug. 23 in 1992, eight people died and three others were injured here.

The Boljakov Potok area in Sarajevo's Novi Grad municipality was targeted by howitzers on Sept. 28, 1992. The mortar shell that hit the Bosniak civilians gathered for funeral prayers killed nine and seriously wounded 20 others.

Similarly, 11 civilians fell victim to artillery weapons on Aug. 30, 1992 at the marketplace in Alipasino Polje.

Six children lost their lives in the same vicinity when on June 22, 1994 they were hit by three mortar shells.

An average of 329 mortar attacks daily

During the nearly four-year siege, 11,541 civilians, 1,601 of whom were children, were killed, while more than 50,000 were injured, records show.

According to estimates, an average of 329 mortar shells were fired on Sarajevo every day, with more than 500,000 bombs dropped in total.

Historical and cultural artifacts and infrastructure of Sarajevo, which has hosted many civilizations throughout history, were also damaged during the prolonged blockade.

Buildings in Sarajevo still carry the traces of the pogrom, and the places where people lost their lives in the bombardments are known as the "Sarajevo Rose," and marked with a red sign.

The Boljakov Potok area in Sarajevo's Novi Grad municipality was targeted by howitzers on Sept. 28, 1992. The mortar shell that hit the Bosniak civilians gathered for funeral prayers killed nine and seriously wounded 20 others.

Similarly, 11 civilians fell victim to artillery weapons on Aug. 30, 1992 at the marketplace in Alipasino Polje.

Six children lost their lives in the same vicinity when on June 22, 1994 they were hit by three mortar shells.

An average of 329 mortar attacks daily

During the nearly four-year siege, 11,541 civilians, 1,601 of whom were children, were killed, while more than 50,000 were injured, records show.

According to estimates, an average of 329 mortar shells were fired on Sarajevo every day, with more than 500,000 bombs dropped in total.

Historical and cultural artifacts and infrastructure of Sarajevo, which has hosted many civilizations throughout history, were also damaged during the prolonged blockade.

Buildings in Sarajevo still carry the traces of the pogrom, and the places where people lost their lives in the bombardments are known as the "Sarajevo Rose," and marked with a red sign.

Source: Anadolu Agency

US ‘will take care of it,’ Biden comments on China spy balloon row

In his first comments on a suspected Chinese spy balloon spotted in US airspace, President Joe Biden said on Saturday that his administration "will take care" of it, the CNN reported.

His comments at the airfield in Syracuse, New York come as discovery of the high-altitude balloon stirred diplomatic tensions between Beijing and Washington.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken postponed his planned trip to China following the sighting.

While the US claimed it was a "clear violation" of its sovereignty, China said it was a civilian airship used for research, mainly meteorological, purposes, and regretted the "unintended entry."

Source: Anadolu Agency

China spy balloon triggers temporary US airspace shutdown

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) on Saturday temporarily shut down three airports and airspace in some parts of the country due to a spy balloon hovering over its airspace.

The FAA said in a statement that operations at Charleston, Myrtle Beach and Wilmington airports are paused due to "national security efforts."

It added that the airspace in North and South Carolina has been closed.

The Pentagon had said on Thursday that it was tracking a suspected Chinese high-altitude surveillance balloon above the continental US.

Washington claimed the incident was a "clear violation" of its sovereignty, but Beijing regretted the incident.

In a statement, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said it was an “unintended entry” by a "civilian airship used for research" that deviated off course and entered US airspace ”due to force majeure.”

President Joe Biden in his first comments on the issue on Saturday said his administration "will take care" of it.

Source: Anadolu Agency

US shoots down Chinese ‘spy’ balloon

The US shot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon on Saturday which had been spotted above US airspace off the coast of South Carolina.

An operation is underway to recover debris from the balloon in the Atlantic Ocean.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the decision was made at the direction of US President Biden.

"U.S. fighter aircraft assigned to U.S. Northern Command successfully brought down the high altitude surveillance balloon launched by and belonging to the People’s Republic of China (PRC)," he said in a statement. "The balloon, which was being used by the PRC in an attempt to surveil strategic sites in the continental United States, was brought down above U.S. territorial waters.

"On Wednesday, President Biden gave his authorization to take down the surveillance balloon as soon as the mission could be accomplished without undue risk to American lives under the balloon’s path, it said."Today’s deliberate and lawful action demonstrates that President Biden and his national security team will always put the safety and security of the American people first while responding effectively to the PRC’s unacceptable violation of our sovereignty."

The move came after Biden said his administration "will take care" of the balloon.

The sighting had stirred diplomatic tension, with Washington saying China violated its sovereignty while Beijing regressed the “unintended entry” by a "civilian airship used for research."

Secretary of State Antony Blinken had postponed his planned trip to China following the "irresponsible act."

Source: Anadolu Agency

1,762 Ukrainians returned from Russian captivity: Volodymr Zelenskyy

A total of 1,762 Ukrainians have been returned from Russian captivity since the beginning of the war, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Saturday.

Zelenskyy noted in a video message on Telegram that 116 more Ukrainian soldiers were released in a new round of prisoner exchanges between Russia and Ukraine.

Pointing out that the exchanges have been going on for months, Zelenskiy said, "Since February 24, 1,762 Ukrainians have managed to escape from Russian captivity."

Zelenskiy said he had a telephone call with UK Prime Minster Rishi Sunak to discuss arms aid to his country.

He said: "Our soldiers have already started training on Challenger tanks 2 in Britain."

He also said the heaviest fighting took place in the Donetsk region since the start of Russia's aggression.

Source: Anadolu Agency

Bodies of 2 British nationals recovered in prisoner swap: Ukrainian official

Two bodies of two British men who were confirmed dead last month in eastern Ukraine have been recovered as part of the latest prisoner swap with Russia, a Ukrainian official said Saturday.

The head of Ukraine’s Presidential Office, Andriy Yermak, said the bodies of Christopher Parry, 28, and Andrew Bagshaw, 48, were recovered as part of the prisoner swap with Russia which resulted in the release of 116 Ukrainian soldiers.

The Foreign Office said in a statement Jan. 24 that Parry's family announced the death of both men while "attempting a humanitarian evacuation."

Parry and Bagshaw reportedly disappeared Jan. 6 near Soledar while helping residents move to safety amid the war with Russia.

Earlier in January, the Wagner Group said it captured one dead body of the two men.

Source: Anadolu Agency