Oil price falls below $100 amid Russia-Ukraine
ceasefire talks
Drop in price comes as Covid-19 infections rise in
China, which could hit demand for energy supplies
Richard
Partington
@RJPartington
Tue 15 Mar
2022 13.24 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/mar/15/oil-price-falls-100-russia-ukraine-covid-19-china
Global oil
prices have fallen back below $100 (£77) a barrel amid ceasefire talks between
Russia and Ukraine and concerns over the rapid growth in Covid infections in
China.
The price
of a barrel of oil slid to $99 on energy markets on Tuesday, before rising back
to just above $100 in early afternoon trading. It comes amid a decline from a
14-year high of close to $130 reached earlier this month after Vladimir Putin
ordered troops into Ukraine.
Analysts
said the drop was driven by hopes for a diplomatic solution in Ukraine. It came
as western leaders urged big oil-producing nations including Saudi Arabia to
increase supply.
Oil prices
had surged close to record levels of about $146 a barrel set in 2008, fuelled
by concerns over supply disruption and the impact of sanctions designed to wean
western economies off Russian oil in response to the conflict.
The drop in
prices also comes as coronavirus infections rise in China leading to tougher
lockdown measures as part of Beijing’s “zero-Covid” strategy, which analysts
said could hit demand for energy supplies from the world’s second biggest
economy.
It also
comes after the Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, signalled Moscow’s
support for the 2014 Iran nuclear deal to resume as soon as possible, which
would lead to sanctions on the country’s oil being lifted.
Economists
have said global oil and gas prices remaining at levels of earlier this month
would dramatically slow the pace of global economic growth and add to an
already intense squeeze on households and businesses through higher inflation.
Although
the oil price has now fallen back to the lowest level in two weeks, it remains
at the highest level since September 2014.
“The
prospect of a diplomatic solution towards Russia’s military aggression against
Ukraine would help ease the world’s energy supply shock that has sent
commodities soaring,” said Victoria Scholar, the head of investment at the
trading platform Interactive Investor.
“Meanwhile
on the demand side for oil, fears about an aggressive policy response from
Beijing to China’s Covid outbreak has raised the prospect of a much weaker
demand for oil from the world’s second largest economy.”
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