G-7 Agrees to Cap the Price of Russian Oil Using a Buyer’s Cartel

G-7 meeting in Germany via the Wall Street Journal

The WSJ reports G-7 Nears Agreement on Exploring New Sanction Capping Russian Oil Price

The Group of Seven club of wealthy democracies is inching toward an agreement on expanding its sanctions against Russia by looking for a mechanism to cap the purchase price of Russian oil, officials said, but the details are still being worked out.

The details of the oil purchase price cap, which would create a buyers’ cartel of Western nations and their allies, and the gold import, both proposed by the U.S., were currently being finalized ahead of the summit’s conclusion on Tuesday, according to three officials.

Ahead of the G-7 gathering, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said that the U.S. was involved in “extremely active” talks with European allies about efforts to form a buyers’ cartel and set a cap on the price of Russian oil. To enforce such a cap, she said last week that officials were reviewing a possible exemption to the European Union’s ban on insuring shipments of Russian oil that would allow insurers to cover shipments of Russian oil only if the sales price falls under a cap.

Price Cap Madness

Never before in history has a international group of buyers stepped forward to create a buyers cartel.

Price caps don’t work. It’s economic madness to attempt them.

Rather than sell to the EU, Russia will sell to India or China. At best, this round of nonsense does nothing other than routing supply from one place to a more distant place at increased for everyone.

At worst, it will provoke Russia to retaliate by cutting the supply of oil or natural gas across the board. 

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi told the meeting that the price cap would be effective against Russia because it would cut financial flows to Moscow while reducing inflation, which has surged across the West partly driven by energy prices, one official familiar with the talks said.

Mr. Draghi has been championing a proposal for the EU to limit the price of Russian gas imports, and sees the proposed oil-price cap as setting a precedent that could pave the way for capping gas payments, too.

If it was so easy, why wasn’t this done months ago? Why not set the price at $15 per barrel?

The details are still being worked out. Whatever they are, they won’t work. 

Russia can put an end to this madness by cutting off the supply of oil totally. Heck, all Russia has to do is threaten to cut supply and nations dependent on Russian oil, notably Hungary, would veto the proposal.

It takes all 27 nations to agree to do anything in the EU.

What If?

Alternatively, given this madness will drive up the price at the margin by further disrupting supply chains, perhaps Putin is happy with this silly idea.

Theatre of the Absurd

Eurointelligence touched on the absurdity of this idea in a related post last week.

The theatre of the absurd has a long European tradition. But even the famous dramatists in this genre would have struggled to come up with anything quite as absurd as the story of Germany and gas sanctions.

The priority at the beginning of the war was clearly to keep the gas flowing. So the German government and the EU agreed to sanction coal and oil, and then flouted their own sanctions by paying Gazprom in roubles. As a result, Vladimir Putin is now so awash in cash that he can afford to use gas sanctions against the EU.

Europe Told to Prepare for Russia Turning Off Gas

The BBC reports Europe Told to Prepare for Russia Turning Off Gas

The head of the International Energy Agency has warned that Russia may stop supplying gas to Europe this winter. Fatih Birol says he believes a complete shutdown is not the most likely scenario but that Europe needs to work on contingency plans just in case.

It may not be the base case now, but the more things the EU does to provoke Russia, the more likely it becomes the base case.

European Gas Extends Gains as Specter of Russian Cuts Persists

Bloomberg reports European Gas Extends Gains as Specter of Russian Cuts Persists

European natural gas prices rose for a third day, with the threat of extended Russian supply cuts spurring concerns that the pace of restocking storage sites will be slower than expected.

Gazprom PJSC’s shipments through Nord Stream remain at about 40% of capacity, which the Russian gas exporter has blamed on a technical fault. This has reduced supplies to buyers in Germany, France, Italy and some other nations. The Russian-German subsea link is the biggest gas pipeline to the European Union.

Canada, where a Nord Stream turbine is stranded for repairs, is in talks with Germany on how to provide the component while respecting the sanctions imposed on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. The turbines were manufactured in Canada and need to be regularly sent back there for maintenance.

The tightened gas supplies prompted some countries to resort to coal for power. Italy, one of the biggest buyers of Russian gas, is temporarily increasing coal-fired generation, joining nations such as Germany, Austria and the Netherlands in reviving mothballed power stations or removing limits on the dirtier-burning fuel.

Emergency Plans in Progress

The New York Times discusses emergency plans as Russia Crimps Gas Flows Just as Europe Races to Stock Up for Winter

On Thursday, Germany triggered the second stage of its three-step emergency gas plan, citing a deterioration of natural gas supplies. The final stage could include gas rationing. “Even if you don’t feel it yet: we are in a gas crisis. Gas is a scarce commodity from now on,” said Robert Habeck, the economy minister.  

Gazprom’s actions have also forced many countries to loosen their restrictions on power plants burning coal, a major source of greenhouse gases.

Gas prices are already extraordinarily high, about six times what they were a year ago. Germany’s finance minister, Christian Lindner, has warned that the persistently high energy costs were threatening to plunge Europe’s largest economy into an economic crisis, and the government has called on consumers and companies to conserve gas.

Coal and Rationing

The EU has been forced into more reliance on coal as Russia cannot repair it pipelines due to sanctions on parts. 

Germany is making plans to ration natural gas. 

But hey, let’s call a G-7 meeting and vote for more sanctions, On top of it, let’s setup a buyers cartel to tell Russia how much the EU will pay for oil and natural gas.

Putin will do one of two things, perhaps both: 

  1. Laugh out loud
  2. Dramatically reduce the supply of gas it sends to the EU while demanding full price

The G-7 put on a stunning display of economic incompetence. But hey, the lead image was a great photo op.

Biden Skips Meeting With Oil Executives to Meet With Wind Energy Executives

Earlier this year, the president discussed ending sanctions on Venezuela and Iran.

Next month, Biden will travel to Saudi Arabia hoping for a commitment for them to pump more oil.

Last week I noted Biden Skips Meeting With Oil Executives to Meet With Wind Energy Executives

And sanction madness continues. It’s driving up prices of energy more than the war itself.

For discussion please see Why Are Energy Prices High? Blame President Biden

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
“Put a cap on the price of… “
Golly gee that sounds vaguely familiar.
Oh yes, that’s called price controls.
That’s worked out well when tried in the past, hasn’t it?
Or maybe not.
BDR45
BDR45
3 years ago
The Western world has the most incompetent and possibly mal intentioned “leaders” ever elected in world history. They are certain to start the next world war.
Dutoit
Dutoit
3 years ago
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
How could I have not seen this? Really, I’m kicking myself. Mish, maybe you should be doing the same thing. Or maybe I have it wrong. If so, someone tell me.

Haven’t the G-7 countries announced that they have shut off imports of Russian oil? If I’m correct, the G-7 just did a 180, with a “buyer’s cartel” figleaf that they know to be a joke. Looks like a pretty big crack in the wall. If I were Putin, I’d cut off all the oil and all the gas anyway, until “the West” calls off the sanctions and forces Ukraine to give up its eastern provinces and recognize the annexation of Crimea, in return for a different security arrangement that gives Ukraine control over the rest.

In any case, I aggressively want to be shown that I’ve got it wrong about this move being an important concession disguised as another sanction.

vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
biden and EU will sign a peace deal with putin in 2024 and in exchange for prisoners russia has, we will put russia back on the petrodollar standard. biden re elected. this is rumor from spooks…………
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
I don’t think Senile Joe will finish his first term.
whirlaway
whirlaway
3 years ago
This news has been in the air for the last 10 days or so. I was awaiting your analysis about it. Thanks!
What a bunch of blithering idiots to think that a buyers’ cartel would work!!!!

And these guys are the ones on our side????!!!! As Voltaire said, “Lord, protect me from my friends; I can take care of my enemies.”
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Last time I looked, the G-7 didn’t include the current big buyers of Russian oil. As soon as the BRICs go along, I’ll pay attention.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
If global warming continues to accelerate as it now is (June is breaking heat records all over), then perhaps there will be a reduced need for gas/oil for heating in the coming winter months.
———-
Global heat records are broken from the Russian Arctic to Japan
June 27, 2022
prumbly
prumbly
3 years ago
Reply to  Jojo
Yawn. Temperature records are always being broken – this include record COLD temperatures. Record cold temperatures in the Antarctic just last year, for example. This is what happens when you only have a very limited historical record and a weather system that is quite random. But, strangely, record cold temperatures rarely make the news…
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  prumbly
Official Los Angeles temperatures go back only to the 1880’s. A few record highs still go back to the late 1800’s. One thing i have noticed us that when an old record is tied, KTLA calls it a new record high, which it isn’t.
whirlaway
whirlaway
3 years ago
Reply to  Jojo
That is wishful thinking – at best. Global warming could actually result in colder winters in some parts of the world:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-9955699/Global-warming-actually-causing-colder-winters-making-polar-vortex-stretch-south-US.html
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
After the abortion thread, I’m not sure if I’m ready to discuss anything that actually matters. I’m going to have to think about this.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
We have to avoided the abortion minefields…
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
The G-7 European nations are enslaved to US.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Our best and brightest madam Madeleine was born Jewish, saved by a Serbian family, flipped to Christianity, bomb Serbia for a month and a half and almost gave up, but Slobo wife couldn’t take it anymore so he raised a white flag and lost his life in jail. // Khadafi mums was Jewish, cousins in Israel. NATO turned Lybia into a shoot hole. Lybia oil production is worse than Venezuela. // Maggi ruled R/R and Bush brains. She order R/R
to destroy USSR, Bush to invade Saddam H. We are still in H-3. // Argentina Malvinas cannot produce enough natgas and wheat to save Europe.
ADM, BG, MOS, NTR are down in the last 2 months.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Well, done, in Jan/Feb Berlin apt pipes might freeze and blowup like in Houston. Berliners either will raise a white flag, or become animals.
Can JP and madam ECB help Germany.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  8dots
If I were Putin, I would shut off the gas immediately. I would declare the suspension to be indeterminate, with resumption dependent on good behavior and German reparations.
I would go on Russian TV and remind everyone that Russia lost 26 million men in the Great Patriotic War, and that I’d be damned if I let the Germans conquer us now.
I would say that Russia is in for hard times, but they will be nothing compared to what our fathers and grandfather’s endured in the 20th century, and that no people on this planet have more capacity for endurance than the Russians.
By the way, if the EU is really doing this because the U.S. is telling them to do it, then the EU is just as demented at Senile Joe Biden
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
Well, you’re not.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
There is more Putin can do to outsmart the muppets: he can state HIS rule based international order i.e. Russia’s exact red lines.
In the imperial version of it, the evil empire defined what the rules are as it deems fit.
The MSM wouldn’t cover it, of course, but that’s not the reason not to do it.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
That is exactly what Lavrov was saying on 16 June to the BBC.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
That is exactly the type of behavior that caused the Germans and the other Europeans to determine that Russia can’t be trusted and that the master-slave relationship by one form or the other is the only relationship that Russia accepts so the choice they made was the only logical one. That choice upset Putin’s plans. For some reason Putin expected the EU and its allies who are seven times more numerous, with a GDP of $44 trillion vs Russia’s $1.5 trillion, with the the world’s largest and second-largest military-industrial complexes married with the world’s largest militaries by far to be cowed by the pipsqueak that Russia is? It was ludicrous to even think that we would back down. So much for Putin’s intelligence and that of those around him.
Webej
Webej
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Are you saying the underdog is winning?
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
No. I am saying that the underdog will lose inevitably. Putin’s depended on a quick victory and the breakup of Nato and neither one happened. Now he faces the combined military, industrial and financial weight of Nato and Nato-allied countries. The math doesn’t ad up for him. He miscalculated badly.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Looks to me that the G-7 is capitulating. In February and March, they announced no imports of Russian oil. Now they want the oil but at a better price? Putin would be a fool if he didn’t tighten the screws.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
Everyone expects him to cut off all oil and gas soon. When he does Russia will never get Europe as client again and Russia’s oil wells will backup and become unusable. He tried to use the pump stuck in Canada to break the sanctions but that didn’t work. Nobody bit the bait. Putin will be a fool and cut off the oil and gas.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
True about a bunch of the wells. Not all, but a bunch. Europe will buy. They’ve just told the world they will buy, but think they’ll set the price. Those people are as addled as Senile Joe. “The West” is going to get knocked down hard.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Then it’s time for Europe to wrap its arms around the idea of NO Russian commodities, starting immediately. Let’s see who “wins” that one.
JRM
JRM
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Western military-industrial complexes are running into problems with producing tanks, since the minerals used in their armour comes from “RUSSIA”.
Which Russia has banned from being exported!!!
The WEST is loosing in Ukraine!!!
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  JRM
I have appeared pro-Putin, but I am not. I am a realist, and a student of history and of current geopolitics. Call me cold-blooded. In an America currently too dominated by emotion, someone’s blood has to run colder than he’d like it to.
Ukraine and Russia have a very, very long history. I think 1,000 years, but maybe I’m imprecise. In that history, Ukraine has been independent for roughly 30 years. Thanks to Uncle Joe Stalin, 6 million Ukrainians died in a communist famine. Thanks to Uncle Joe, eastern Ukraine is majority Russian. Thanks to whatever Ukraine is or has been lately, they have killed thousands of civilians lately, meaning within the past decade or so.
Russia and Ukraine share a critical doom: demographics. Their birth rates have been so low, for so long, that the next 60 years are written in the genetic code. We see two rapidly depleted armies, bereft of the stupid kids who weren’t born. Each side desperately recruits the elderly. Two cancer patients battle, and for what?

I am an American. I make no apologies. I offer no excuses. I look at the rest of the world and see beauty and good, wrapped in the prison of history and uncontained religion. Ukraine and Russia is a classic tragedy. Why is the U.S. involved? What is the relationship of the EU and the U.S. government? Who is pulling the strings, and what are the strings? I am an American! This is the New World.

JRM
JRM
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
Same with me I love History especially military history..
Dutoit
Dutoit
3 years ago
“We are going to cause the collapse of the Russian economy”, declared, on Tuesday March 1, the French Minister of Economy, Bruno Le Maire.
Before being Minister of Economy, Le Maire was minister of agriculture, and did not even know what is an “hectare”, the common area measurement unit in agriculture in France. When Minister of Economy, it has been highlighted that he did not know the method of cross-multiplication.
It appears that we are directed by completely incompetent people, on all subjects, economy, security, defense. It seems even that they are not only incompetent, but are also deliberately harmful, look at the result of their management of immigration, industry (almost destroyed, even in nuclear energy), military (we can sustain a real war as in Ukrain only for a few days), etc.
But of course the main responsible of this are those who elected them.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Dutoit
We have the same problem in the US. Ever looked at Biden’s cabinet? They were picked based on how they look. Not on their competency.
whirlaway
whirlaway
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Yes. To paraphrase Warren Buffett: “If you simply pick two of every kind, what you end up with is not a cabinet; you end up with a zoo!”
Webej
Webej
3 years ago
The West is in complete denial of reality.
Having already shot themselves in both feet, they are running out of toes to shoot, all to impose sacrifices for freedom and to punish Putin.
What a bunch of deplorable clowns…
Wait till the balance is made up and 100K Ukrainian lads have died in vain, all so the neo-cons could engage in their fantasy of inflicting another Afghanistan on the RF.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
Then we are going to have to shoot your feet.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
Future historians will look closely at just why and how “the West” decided to cede its military and economic policies to a corrupt Ukrainian comedian.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
He proved to be more of a man and leader?
whirlaway
whirlaway
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
They are done with the feet and the toes. In this case, they are shooting themselves – as Forrest Gump would say – “in the buTT-ocks”!
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
“At worst, it will provoke Russia…”
Is that what they are seeking?
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
What’s Russia gonna do, start bombing the neighbors?
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Is that what they want him to do?
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
Poking a teddy bear is of no consequence.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
They’ll set the cap at whatever Russia wants and then state they’re being tough against Putin.
The West thinks they’re still in charge, but clearly the new world order is going to be Asia centric.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
Like something out of “Alice in Wonderland”.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Price caps like rent caps end up causing penuries of the asset capped. The G7 wants to put a price cap on Russian oil so in principle it will cause a penury of Russian oil. In conjunction with the cap is the plan to allow Russian oil to be transported and its cargos insured only if the price cap is respected by the buyers of the Russian oil. Additionally Russia yesterday has officially defaulted on some bonds so legally Russian assets like ships can now legally be confiscated. Nato and the G7 are sea powers so they will use control of the sea to control who gets Russian oil and what price they will pay. The first aim is to cut off oil transported via the Black Sea and the Baltic. Recently the EU has cut the rail lines between the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad and Russia via Belarus. That is moving from the embargo strategy to the blockade strategy and the cap on Russian oil is just one part. The insurance ban is another part as is the legal possibility to confiscate Russian tankers on the high seas or in port because of the default. You might call it payback for Russia keeping preventing from exporting food to the rest of the world. The G7 is putting in place a global strategy to strangle Russia’s exports and thereby crush its ability to wage war against Ukraine. Need I mention that the region Russia is trying to conquer contains Europe’s second largest reserves of oil, gas and coal?
FromBrussels
FromBrussels
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Russia’s ‘default’ is a fn FARCE and you know it….the rest of your comment is pure Nato/US inspired buffoonery….Believe me, Nato won t get Russia on its knees…. Let m keep on pushing things to the next insane level though, and we ll see where it ALL ends….
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  FromBrussels
Still think Putin is playing 4-D chess? What’s his next move? Sell Siberia to China in exchange for China’s support?
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Senile Joe went on TV in February and said to wait a month, and Russia would come crawling. And the ruble is going to be rubble. Turns out that the ruble is the world’s best performer against the dollar, and Russia is making more money than ever. And now they don’t even have to service their external debt. Who’s the idiot, again?
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  FromBrussels
Comrade Yoda! Report for duty! Mother Russia need more hamburger meat!
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
I am still confused as to how someone can be held in default when it is the creditor that refuses to accept payment offered.
Eighthman
Eighthman
3 years ago
A few years ago, a group of aliens decided to attack the West. They invented a “Stupid” broadcaster. As long as they turn up the knob on the device Very Slowly, no one will ever notice any difference. And so far, No One Does.
I can only guess that psychoactive drugs ( legal and illegal) together with smartphones have compromised mass thinking. I have never witnessed anything like this in politics and social relations. It gets more bizarre by the day.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Eighthman
You never lived in the ’60s and ’70s. Talk about things getting weird. At least the music was good then.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
“When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.”
— Hunter S. Thompson
Eighthman
Eighthman
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
I lived through those decades and it wasn’t like this. LBJ and Nixon were evil but highly skilled and did amazing things. Eisenhower was solidly competent. Medvedev (Russia) made a similar comment about the EU in regard to Thatcher and DeGaulle.
The Pentagon said 70+ % of young men aren’t fit to serve in any draft and they can’t make recruiting goals – so today it was announced they didn’t need a high school diploma. Also today? Announcement that a past history of drug use doesn’t disqualify potential spies for the US.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Eighthman
Yet today, apparently up to 40,000 National Guard are facing being removed as they have thus far refused to take the unsafe Covid shot.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Eighthman
If you had lived through that decade and saw it as a tranquil time then you must have had a protected existence. Eisenhower was in the ’50s and Medvedev is hardly a good judge of character. Just look for whom he works.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
Reply to  Eighthman
“The Pentagon said 70+ % of young men aren’t fit to serve in any draft and they can’t make recruiting goals – so today it was announced they didn’t need a high school diploma. Also today? Announcement that a past history of drug use doesn’t disqualify potential spies for the US.”
Do you think Russia is any different?
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Jojo
Yes. American drugs are much better.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  Eighthman

Humans have always been this way, but now we have computers that amplify both intelligence AND stupidity.

FromBrussels
FromBrussels
3 years ago
….the G7 is a affluence drunk FREAK SHOW, not giving a a damn about common people …..just like Putin some will say , Putin at least is a rational idealist, which can not be said about those utterly clueless narcist G7 creeps !
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  FromBrussels
As an idealist Putin is hoping for a good outcome and he survives. As a realist he knows that will not happen.
Webej
Webej
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Autocrat Putin has quite a bit better ratings than Brandon.
Chinese authorities also bask in enviable support and confidence among the population.
One of the reasons Putin had to do something about the shelling of Donetsk was domestic political pressure … who would’a thunk?
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
Yes. Some people like you prefer to be ruled by an autocrat but in liberal democracies they do not. Call it a cultural quirk if you like and that cultural quick makes us uneasy when an autocrat invades a liberal democracy so we tend to react since we will not stand to be subject to autocrats. If they stay in their own country we don’t care much. When they invade our friends we do care.
Putin as an autocrat didn’t thunk through what he was attempting to do and since autocrats have toadies around them nobody was there to tell him the risks to Russia he was taking.
Webej
Webej
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Uh. If you think Ukraine is an example of a liberal democracy, you are not reading much about human rights reports, media freedoms, extra-judicial killings & kidnappings, treatment of Roma, banned opposition parties, discussing extermination on public TV, etc etc.
You are making this a contest between democracy & autocracy, but in Russia they hold elections and have courts & rights.
You might think it’s all a sham, but then a lot of people think it’s a sham when the EU extends Corona passes after getting 385,469 reactions against and none for, or when the US Congress bails out the banks after getting millions (>99% against) reactions imploring them not to. China & Russia both say they want a more democratic world order, although they are talking about the relationship between states. Everything is not so cut and dried as you think.
80% of people think they drive better than average, 99% think they are at bottom good people, and 99.9% think they are on the right side of history.
FromBrussels
FromBrussels
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
You call fn corrupt Nazi infested Ukraine a fn democracy ?! ….Jeez , I thought, for a while, some time ago, you were clever… Who brainwashed you ? ….4 fn covid vaccines can not be healthy that s obvious…
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
So you feel Biden’s toadies are better than Putin’s toadies?
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
So many like you seek a daddy-king. It’s not healthy.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
You prefer Senile Joe. Not healthy. LOL
Freebees2me
Freebees2me
3 years ago
Now that is a hoot!
Can any one imagine telling voters, yeah,
You can’t have any gas because I won’t pay the price?
This will truly be honored in the breach…
ColoradoAccountant
ColoradoAccountant
3 years ago
The A students go into science and medicine, the B students go into business, and the C students go into politics.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
And intelligent students with OCD go into accounting.
prumbly
prumbly
3 years ago
The G7 has a God-given right to rule the world and is extremely pissed that Russia went ahead and did something without their permission. Only the chosen few are allowed to attack other countries whenever they like with no consequences – such as the unprovoked attack on Iraq in 2003.
Webej
Webej
3 years ago
Reply to  prumbly
Or the US invasion of Somalia in the third week of May 2022.
They’re calling it a ‘Special Operation’.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Webej
Fifth month of the invasion of Ukraine and Russians still can’t call it a war. If they do they get 15 years for spreading “rumors”. We on the other can call it whatever we want without running the risk of incarceration.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
And the newest Supreme Court judge can’t tell anyone what a woman is.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  JackWebb
And your leaders don’t know a war when they see it.
JackWebb
JackWebb
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
Huh?
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
3 years ago
And yet the West is perfectly willing to buy things made in China or outsource call centers to India powered with Russian oil. Nobody has any shame for being a hypocrite.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  Six000mileyear
And they’ll blame the oil companies for climate change while standing there pumping gas into their car.
Nuddernoitall
Nuddernoitall
3 years ago
Pool photographer took several photos, and yet the one Reuters highlights is the one where Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is hidden. I can only conclude this Reuters selection was the only one where Biden was alert and awake. By the way, shouldn’t Ron Klain be seated at the table too?
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
The G7 is not the EU. So I don’t think an EU veto matters in this case.
In the long run this strikes me as another bump in the road. Not much long term impact on demand or supply.
What does matter? Our demand for energy is outstripping our supply. We cannot bring supply on fast enough. Things are going to get very interesting later this year as OPEC spare capacity gets used up and SPR releases end.
In 2023, US demand jumps as we are scheduled to refill the SPR. Where does the oil for that come from?
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave
If oil isn’t cheaply available then the SPR won’t be refilled.
killben
killben
3 years ago
What else can you expect from politicians…
Want to see someone being prescient…
The day Putin shuts off gas to Germany may not be far off – especially with that buffoon Boris trying to show off his war skills to ward off the evils at home.

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