Ukraine crisis: Russia warns West of $300 per barrel oil, cuts to EU gas supply

Western nations could confront oil costs of more than $300 per barrel and the conceivable conclusion of the principle Russia-Germany gas pipeline on the off chance that legislatures finish dangers to cut energy supplies from Russia, a senior pastor said on Monday.

Oil costs spiked to their most significant levels beginning around 2008 on Monday after US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington and European partners were thinking about forbidding Russian oil imports.

“It is totally certain that a dismissal of Russian oil would prompt horrendous ramifications for the worldwide market,” Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said in a proclamation on state TV.

“The flood in costs would be eccentric. It would be $300 per barrel while possibly not more.”

Novak said it would take Europe over a year to supplant the volume of oil it gets from Russia and it would need to address altogether greater expenses.

“European legislators need to genuinely caution their residents and shoppers what’s in store,” Novak said.

“To dismiss energy supplies from Russia, go on. We are prepared for it. We know where we could divert the volumes to.”

Novak said Russia, which supplies 40% of Europe’s gas, was satisfying its commitments in full however that it would be completely inside its privileges to fight back against the European Union after Germany last month froze the affirmation of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline.

“Regarding … the burden of a prohibition on Nord Stream 2, we reserve each option to take a matching choice and force a ban on gas siphoning through the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline,” Novak said.

“Up until this point we are not taking such a choice,” he said. “Yet, European legislators with their assertions and allegations against Russia push us towards that.”