
Russia is generating billions in revenues from its commodity exports due to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the German-Russian Foreign Trade Chamber reported on Tuesday.
Russia’s profits from exporting oil, gas and fertilizer amount to more than €10 billion ($11.54 billion) a month, the chamber said. "Russia is the big winner of the new war in the Middle East," Matthias Schepp, the chamber’s chairman, told dpa.
Russia is benefiting from higher global commodity prices because it uses other export routes. All of this could "bring Russia an unexpected windfall on a historic scale," Schepp said in Moscow.
With a sustained oil price of around $100 a barrel, Russia could expect an annual increase of $71.8 billion compared with the budget plan.
The price of Brent crude for June delivery rose to more than $111 per industry-standard barrel - each of which holds 159 litres - at the start of the week. That is almost $40 more than before the war began.
The Russian budget is heavily dependent on the sale of oil and gas, with $59 per barrel currently assumed in the budget. Before the Iran war, it showed a deficit because the oil price was below the planned level.
"At the current price level, Moscow can generate around $50 billion in additional revenue per year from oil and gas alone," the chamber said.
Russia funds its war in Ukraine through exports
Russia, which is also hoping for an end to Western sanctions, is using the proceeds from commodity sales to finance its war against Ukraine.
Some in Moscow are already hoping for an oil price of $200 per barrel. According to the chamber, that would bring in $350.4 billion, $247 billion more than planned in the budget.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Culinary Joys: Investigating Connoisseur Cooking at Home - 2
January’s full wolf supermoon and the Quadrantid meteor shower will start off the new year - 3
The Golden Globes is happening Sunday: Who's nominated, who's hosting and how to watch - 4
German Winemakers Rewrite The Rules Of Riesling In A Warming World - 5
Whale stranded in the Baltic Sea swims free again. It still faces a tough task
Parents who delay baby's first vaccines also likely to skip measles shots
The Ascent of the Kona SUV: How Hyundai's Reduced Hybrid Is Vanquishing the Streets
How to get rid of your Christmas tree — and the 1 thing to never, ever do with it
Spots To Go Birdwatching All over the Planet
Churches and politicians in South Sudan call for 'lasting peace' in Easter messages
Nature: 10 High priority Setting up camp Spots In Europe
2 bright planets light up April evenings — here's where and when to look
Scientist turns people’s mental images into text using ‘mind-captioning’ technology
Who plays Moana in the live-action remake? What to know about Catherine Lagaʻaia.












