NEW YORK: Oil jumped about 2% on Monday, with investors worried about tighter supply as mounting civilian deaths in Ukraine increased pressure on European countries to impose sanctions on Russia’s energy sector.
Global benchmark Brent crude was up $1.94, or 1.9%, to $106.33 a barrel by 1:10 p.m. EDT (1710 GMT). US West Texas Intermediate crude rose $2.50, or 2.5%, to $101.77 a barrel. Trading was volatile with both contracts gaining more than $4 earlier, after being down more than $1.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Russian President Vladimir Putin and his supporters would “feel the consequences” of events in Bucha, outside the capital Kyiv, where a mass grave and tied bodies shot at close range were found.
Western allies would agree on further sanctions against Moscow in coming days, he said, though the timing and reach of the new package was not clear.
France’s President Emmanuel Macron suggested sanctions on oil and coal, adding there were very “clear clues pointing to war crimes” by Russian forces.
Russia’s invasion in February heightened supply concerns that were already underpinning prices. Sanctions and buyers’ avoidance of Russian oil have already dented output and raised fears of tighter supplies.
“As the US and EU reduce purchases of Russian oil, it leaves China and India as the main customers that remain and many of the refineries in those countries might be reluctant to purchase Russian oil with the negative public relations associated,” said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates in Houston.
Crude dropped by about 13% last week after President Joe Biden announced a record US oil reserves release and as International Energy Agency members committed to further tapping reserves. Brent crude hit $139 last month, its highest since 2008.
“The massive release of 1 million barrels per day over a period of six months in the United States alone is likely to ensure that the oil market is no longer acutely undersupplied in the second and third quarters,” Commerzbank’s Carsten Fritsch wrote in a report.
Oil also gained support on Monday from a pause in talks in Vienna to revive the Iran nuclear deal, which would allow a lifting of sanctions on Iranian oil. Iran on Monday blamed the United States for the halt.
Downward pressure came from a truce in Yemen, which could ease threats to supply in the Middle East.
For the first time in the seven-year conflict, the United Nations has brokered a two-month truce between a Saudi-led coalition and the Houthi group aligned with Iran. Saudi oil facilities have come under Houthi attack during the fighting.