Granholm is scheduled to meet with counterparts from the Quad group of nations — Australia, India, Japan and the US — during a visit to Sydney that’ll also touch on cooperation on supply of critical minerals needed for clean energy technologies.
“We want to put on the table the option of joining a buyers’ group that will have greater market power to be able to lower the price, and therefore lower the price of Russian oil and lower the profits to Putin,” Granholm said Monday in an interview in Sydney.
The strategy, raised among Group of Seven leaders last month, is to limit the revenue Moscow earns from oil exports without driving Russian cargoes off the global market. It would cap prices by banning insurance and transportation services needed to ship Russian crude and petroleum products unless the oil is purchased below an agreed price.
The efforts are intended to try to cap the price on Russian oil at between $40 and about $60 a barrel, people familiar with the matter said earlier this month.
India has boosted purchases of Russian fuel in recent months, spending $8.8 billion on petroleum and coal imports from Feb. 24 to June 30 — more than it doled out for all Russian goods in 2021. Japan also remains heavily reliant on energy imports from Russia.
Critics have said the price-cap plan is too complex to work in practice, and also raised questions over whether countries like China and India, who are among the largest buyers of Russian oil, would cooperate.
Granholm also said:
- The administration is examining proposals from oil producers following talks aimed at taming gasoline prices. Options include exempting gasoline from anti-smog rules that require low-volatility fuel in the summer, and providing Jones Act waivers that would enable non-US flagged ships to serve refineries in the northeast.
- Discussions with refiners will also continue over action on stockpiles. “We want to make sure that their inventories are fuller than what they are right now, they’re at fairly low rates.”
- There’s optimism that talks between Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin on President Joe Biden’s revised economic agenda will reach agreement and include “some significant climate provisions.” Spending on clean energy and climate action will likely be less than an originally envisaged $555 billion, she added.
- Talks with allies in Australia will also focus on technology sharing in areas including clean hydrogen, power grid enhancement, carbon capture and storage, and on cooperation on critical mineral supply chains.
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