MOSCOW (MRC) -- Russian officials said Saudi Arabia won't be able to maintain the discounted crude prices offered to refiners in Eastern Europe as the nation toned down its criticism of oil shipments from the biggest OPEC producer, as per Hydrocarbonprocessing.
Saudi Arabia has priced its oil at a six-year low for Europe after starting to ship crude to traditional Russian markets, such as Poland.
The discounted crude "is a temporary situation and it won't work for a long period," Nikolay Tokarev, CEO of Russia’s state-run oil pipeline operator, Transneft, said in an interview on Friday.
Oil executives in Russia, which ships almost 70% of its crude to Europe, last month criticized Saudi Arabia’s strategy even before it dropped its December price for the northwest of the continent to lowest since February 2009. Still, while the Russian central bank warned last week that increased competition from the Middle East may create economic risks, Energy Minister Alexander Novak was more sanguine on Friday.
"If more or less one oil cargo is added or drops off, there’s no need to turn it into a sensation," Novak told reporters in Moscow.
We remind that, as MRC wrote previously, in March 2015, US oil and gas major ExxonMobil asked the Russian government to reimburse taxes worth "several billion roubles" it says it overpaid on a project in the far east of Russia.
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