Seven industry sources told Reuters that western oil majors and trading houses have clashed with Russia’s third and fourth biggest producers, Gazprom Neft and Surgutneftegaz, over 2019 oil sales contract terms during unusually tough annual renegotiations in recent weeks.
The development mirrors a similar stand-off between western buyers and Russia’s top oil producer, Rosneft.
Earlier this week, trading sources told Reuters that Rosneft wants western oil buyers to pay penalties from 2019 if they fail to pay for supplies in the event that new US sanctions disrupt sales.
Now sources have told Reuters that Surgutneftegaz and Gazprom Neft have also clashed with their buyers over penalties and the use of euros and other currencies to replace the dollar in contracts.
“It is part of the same trend - the Russian oil industry is working on mitigating new sanctions risks. The buyers in turn argue they cannot carry those risks so we are trying to find compromises,” said one source with a western buyer involved in negotiations, asking not to be named as the talks are confidential.
Russia has been under US and EU sanctions since 2014 when it invaded Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula. The sanctions have been repeatedly widened to include new companies and sectors, making it tough for Russian oil firms to borrow money abroad, raise new capital or develop Arctic and unconventional deposits.
President Vladimir Putin’s administration has been hoping for a thaw in relations with the United States since President Donald Trump came to power but Washington has imposed new sanctions instead, including on some of Russia’s richest people.