Friday, October 31, 2025

Washington’s Oil Sanctions Rattle Asia’s Energy Security

The U.S. federal government this week declared sanctions on two of the largest Russian crude oil exporters, Rosneft and Lukoil, which together account for about half of the country’s total outflows. Oil prices jumped, traders got excited—then prices fell. But the supply security of some major importers just got problematic.

Russia exports around 4 million barrels of crude oil daily. Some of the major producers have already been sanctioned earlier – Gazprom Neft, for example, and Surgutneftegaz. Rosneft and Lukoil are also the target of many sanctions, but none of these until now have directly targeted their sales overseas. With the latest sanctions, as much as three-quarters of Russian oil exports will effectively be banned to anyone using U.S.-dollar-based payment systems and the U.S. financial system, Russian business daily Kommersant reckons.

Three-quarters of 4 million barrels daily is a lot. It is, in fact, larger than the size of the oil market surplus that the International Energy Agency has predicted for this year. That surplus, per the IEA, will be 2.35 million barrels daily. The portion of Russian exports under sanctions amounts to some 3 million barrels, with the latest additions of Rosneft and Lukoil. Assuming the sanctions will be 100% effective in cutting that much oil from Russia’s exports, the global oil market will be rebalanced in the blink of an eye, more or less, quenching concerns about a glut.

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Of course, history teaches us that no sanctions are 100% effective, and there is also the matter of the latest declaration’s phrasing, as noted by the Wall Street Journal. The sanctions, the Department of Treasury said, mean “financial institutions and other persons may risk exposure to sanctions for engaging in certain transactions or activities with designated or otherwise blocked persons.” According to the WSJ, this sort of phrasing suggests there are loopholes that can be used by Indian and Chinese financial institutions that, per the WSJ again, “couldn’t survive long if they lost access to U.S. banks and dollars.”

The thing, however, is that China and India have already been testing local currency payments for Russian oil. Chances are that this testing would accelerate thanks to the latest sanctions, with even more Russian crude being sold for yuan or rupees. The latest reports say that both Chinese and Indian buyers are suspending orders from Russia, but this is most likely an immediate, knee-jerk reaction until the implications of the latest sanctions are measured and analyzed.

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