58 Finance & economics TheEconomistMarch12th 2022
Supply, which is easy to cut but takes lon
ger to ramp up, had not caught up, says
Giovanni Serio of Vitol, a big oiltrading
firm. Many “midstream” facilities that had
shut during covid19, such as oil refineries,
remained offline, creating bottlenecks.
The second reason for worry is vanish
ing supply, which has been the main pro
blem since the invasion of Ukraine. Some
Russian oil is still flowing out: millions of
barrels are currently crossing the Atlantic.
But most of it was bought and paid for a
fortnight ago or longer. Fresher supplies of
Urals crude, the variety Russia pumps, are
no longer moving—despite 25% price dis
counts. Western firms, loth to find them
selves stuck with unsaleable cargo, are pre
empting possible sanctions. Many also
fear a public backlash: on March 8th Shell
said it would stop buying Russian oil after
days of negative press coverage following a
purchase of Urals crude.
Particularly problematic is the lack of
financing. Most foreign banks, even Chi
nese ones, have stopped issuing letters of
credit for Russian trades. After a decade of
paying steep fines for breaching sanctions
against Iran and other pariahs, banks are
taking no chances. Increasingly that also
applies to big commodity traders like Glen
core, which not that long ago still dealt
with autocrats in the name of powering the
planet (and pocketing profits). Many fear
being cut off from bank funding, their life
line, if they continue to deal with Russia.
Problems with logistics are no less im
portant. Unable to get insurance, foreign
ships are avoiding the Black Sea. Last week
Maersk and msc, which together account
for a third of container operations in Rus
sia, pulled away from the country. Britain
has banned Russian ships from its ports;
the euis mulling similar measures. France
has intercepted Russian ships carrying
steel and soya bound for other countries.
Idle cargo and erratic prices are strain
ing the physical and financial infrastruc
ture of commodity trading. Some Euro
pean ports are severely congested. Wrong
footed traders are facing hefty margin
calls. On March 7th China Construction
Bank, a big lender, missed a payment at the
lme (it has since made it). Bunkerfuel
prices have risen by a third since the inva
sion, constraining shipping worldwide.
A proper oil embargo by the West could
make all that look like a pleasant punt on
the Cam. In normal years Russia exports
7m8m barrels per day (bpd), half of which
go to the eu. In theory China could buy
more from Russia, freeing up some other
supply. But Rystad Energy, a consultancy,
estimates that Russia’s pipelines could re
route just 500,000 bpd from Europe to
Asia, with rail adding another 200,000
bpd. Ferrying Russian oil to Europe takes 5
10 days; shipping it to Asia takes 45. Redi
recting flows would get even harder if “sec
ondary” sanctions target nonWestern
firms. With Western payment systems out
of bounds, traders would turn to clunky
bartering. Better alternatives, used by Chi
na or others, could take years to scale up.
This suggests a fair chunk of Russia’s oil
supply could exit the market. Other com
modities would probably be affected. Rus
sia has pledged to respond to a fullblown
oil embargo by curtailing gas exports to the
West. Limits on coal sales would also be
painful, and would complicate Europe’s ef
fort to shift away from gas. As the quality of
its own supply has deteriorated, the share
of the bloc’s imports of coal coming from
Russia has doubled over the past ten years,
to 80%. In the case of both gas and coal,
much of Russia's supply would simply not
get to market. Its gasstorage facilities are
almost full. It does not have a big enough
fleet to ship coal to Asia, where it is most in
demand (it sends coal to Europe by rail).
Call the cartel
The big question is whether an increase in
supply from elsewhere could mitigate
such losses. Start with oil. America has al
ready scheduled an increase in oil output
of 1m bpd. The West could also press mem
bers of the Organisation of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (opec) to increase
supply, yielding perhaps another 2m bpd.
Lifting sanctions on Iran may add another
1m bpd. Tapping emergency stocks would
help, too. Last week America and other big
oilconsuming countries agreed to release
60m barrels from their stash. Hints have
been given that they could release more.
All this may increase global supply by
3m4m bpd—a lot, but perhaps not
enough. And the extra supply would take
too long to arrive. opecmembers cannot
crank up production fast, because they
have not invested in new fields for years.
Restarting American shale wells takes six
months; delivering crude from them an
other six. In the interim, prices would re
main excruciatingly high. And there would
be other problems. Retrofitting refineries
meant to guzzle Urals crude, which has a
highsulphurcontent,ishard.Lebanonhas
justrunoutofdieselnotforwantofoilbut
capacitytoprocessnonUralsgrades.
FindingnewgassuppliesisEurope’s
bigproblem.Asspringcomestheconti
nentwillneedlessofit,andpostwinter
restockingcouldbedelayeduntiltheau
tumn.Meanwhile,Europecouldstartim
porting moreliquefied naturalgasfrom
America,thoughthatwouldrequireEu
ropetocrankupits“regasification”capac
ity(forconvertingliquefiedgasbackinto
gaseousstate).Scheduledsummermainte
nanceonNorwegianrigs couldbepost
ponedsotheycontinuetoproduce.Azer
baijancouldpipemore toEurope.Alto
gethersuchfixescouldreplaceabout60%
of Russian imports, Rystad reckons. A
strongeffort—butstillinsufficient.
Rebalancingthemarketthusseemsim
possiblewithouta forcedreductioninde
mand.Theleastbrutalwaytoachievethis
wouldbethroughpoliciesseekingtolimit
consumption,suchascapsontheheating
ofbuildingsortherationingofpowerfor
industrialuse.Morelikelythemarketwill
adjust to soaring prices the hard way,
throughwhateconomistscall“demandde
struction”:selfimposedcuts.MrSerioof
Vitolsaysa jumpincrudepricesto$200a
barrelcouldinduce“voluntary”cutsof2m
bpd,withanother2mbpdnotconsumed
asincomesare squeezed.OnMarch9th
Rystadsaidpricescouldreach$240a bar
relthissummerifmorecountriesjointhe
Americanembargo.
Suchenergyhellwouldtakea hugetoll
onfirmsandpeople.Demanddestruction
inmetalswouldaddtothepain.Alumini
umshortagescouldhamperthemakingof
anythingfromcarstocans.A nickelscarci
tycouldhaltelectricvehicleproduction.
Allthiswillsurelyhobblerichecono
mies.JPMorganChase,a bank,alreadyex
pectstheworldeconomytogrowby0.8
percentagepointslessin 2022 thanitdida
weekbeforetheinvasion,withtheeuro
zonetakinga hitof2.1percentagepoints.
For poorer countries the immediate
threatisthatofwallopingcurrentaccount
Off balance
Current-account balance, % of GDP
Sources:IEA;IMF;TheEconomist
Greece
Belarus
India
Tu r ke y
China
SouthAfrica
SouthKorea
-10-15 -5 50
01 Balance with oil at $150 per barrel
Dear, dear
Commodity prices, January 1st 2022=100
Source:Bloomberg
*Dutch TTF spot price
†Brent crude ‡Newcastle
1
300
250
200
150
100
50
Jan Feb Mar
Coal‡
Nickel
Aluminium
Oil†
Natural gas* Russia invades
Ukraine