Washington’s criticism is misplaced: attacks on oil refineries will not have the effect on global energy markets that U.S. officials fear. These s​trikes reduce Russia’s ability to turn its oil into usable products; they do not affect the volume of oil it can extract or export. In fact, with less domestic refining capacity, Russia will be forced to export more of its crude oil, not less, pushing global prices down rather than up. Indeed, Russian firms have already started selling more unrefined oil overseas. As long as they remain restricted to Russian refineries, the attacks are unlikely to raise the price of oil for Western consumers.

  • kava@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Even if Russia increases crude oil exports to compensate, virtually all of their gasoline is produced domestically for domestic consumption. That demand isn’t going to just disappear. Every liter that Russia stops producing from these refinery strikes will be imported from other sources.

    They will have to Kazakhstan in order to make up the difference (which they have already started, afaik), then prices go up on the global market for gasoline.

    If gasoline price goes up, there’s economic incentive to buy crude oil to produce gasoline. That raises price of crude oil. You can’t avoid it. It’s all connected. You reduce global production and you raise price.

    • MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I’m okay with reducing my gas use and/or paying more for gas in order to keep Putin out of Ukraine. I know that not everybody has room to stretch their dollar, so I don’t mean to come off as callous, but my minor inconvenience is easily worth stopping bombs from hitting civilians in Ukraine. We already know that appeasement doesn’t work. Putin will not stop. Let’s stop allowing money to decide for us whether we should let monsters thrive.

      • kava@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        How much is acceptable to you? Is there a point where it isn’t worth it anymore?

        Inflation was around 10% before the federal reserve hiked the interest rates.

        Your rent going up $200 every year OK? Grocery bill, gas, etc?

        I wonder where people draw the line between acceptable and not acceptable. We’re still feeling the economic effects, just the fed managed to reduce inflation at the cost of other economic pains. For example people buying homes or financing cars is much more expensive now. Or companies are laying people off because credit is more expensive and it’s harder to expand. Big companies like Comcast may choose to wait a few years before building a new fiber network- waiting for rates to go back down. That kills lots of high quality jobs that would have existed otherwise.

        How much economic pain is acceptable? You call it an inconvenience and then you call it callous. I believe it is a bit callous, yes.

        You and I may be in a good financial position (I’m personally not afraid), but what about the rest of working class America?

        There are two directions at this point that the war can develop A) negotiated settlement where Russia annexes territory or B) war between Russia & Western countries.

        Do you have a brother? Nephew? Cousin? Would you be willing to sacrifice his life to help Ukraine? Would you be willing to sacrifice your own life?

        I ask these things not to say supporting Ukraine is foolish or anything like that, but just to point out that Russia is willing to sacrifice everything for Ukraine. If we are committed to Russia losing, we will need to sacrifice a lot more than we currently are.

        If we are not willing to go all the way, what are we even doing in Ukraine?

        • MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          You’re asking so many questions that it’s borderline gish gallop. I’ll just focus on one:

          If we are not willing to go all the way, what are we even doing in Ukraine?

          This is likely why you’re getting down votes. You’re making two false assumptions with this question that seems to sorta sum up your whole point: first that Russia is willing to sacrifice everything and second that it would take us sacrificing everything in kind to push them back. Russia is running low on war machine fodder and is now resorting to tricking people into coming to Russia for economic opportunity only to be thrown to the frontlines. To my knowledge, no Americans are fighting in Ukraine. It’s also worth noting that America is not the only country who should or is doing anything to help Ukraine; pretty much all of Western Europe is on board, and that’s good news because it’d be pretty fucking dumb to ignore a raging fire next door when your house is mighty flammable; if Russia takes Ukraine, they won’t just stop there.

          At the end of the day, yeah I could see this escalating to a direct war with Russia, and I have very few concerns about that. I don’t think that what we’re doing is so little that we might as well do nothing and watch Ukraine fall. That’s the most defeatist, futile, pointless exercise of a thought experiment I can imagine. That’s like deciding to never eat again just because you didn’t have time to eat breakfast this morning.

          • Thirdborne@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            How irrational is the idea that Russia won’t stop at Ukraine? These guys don’t have the logistics to extend 100km from their border. You lying or a bot? What you’re saying is a plain contradiction of reality.

            I hate the internet where people say the most obvious lies with complete conviction. This stuff has to be fake content produced by somebody with an agenda. It’s on both sides. Sure. This is war in 2024. But here we are, the small people trying to eat and pay rent while our masters are telling us it’s worth sacrificing it all for some country that doesn’t affect us. Why? So Haliburton et al can get another trillion? But the cost is that we’re cut off from honestly discussing the life or death issues of our class.

            I’m poor and it sucks! It sucks more when gas prices go up and nobody hears me because I’m under a mountain of propaganda and botted down votes.

            • MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              Because I know my history. Nazi Germany expanded little by little. And we let Hitler do it several times, thinking he would stop after this one or after that one.

              Good thing Russia stopped after Georgia… /s

              Your economic hardship does not excuse a torrent of war crimes. I agree that there are war profiteers making out great right now, but it’s silly to think that allowing Russia to do whatever they want and kill everyone in their path is somehow sticking it to the billionaire elite class and helping you somehow. And calling me a bot for pointing that out makes you seem even less credible.

            • IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              How irrational is the idea that Russia won’t stop at Ukraine?

              It’s not. Crack open a history book, there’s a non-zero chance you might learn something.

    • Habahnow
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      7 months ago

      You bring up a good point that isn’t addressed very well. There’s still less refined oil being produced that is demanded. In this case, its for Russia. I suppose this demand is partially reduced as Russia will try to minimize unnecessary refined oil usage (maybe eventually increasing local prices to discourage unnecessary use), but even then I still feel their reduced refining capabilities should have an impact on prices.

      I suppose that other refineries could pick up the slack, but I’m uncertain whether that really makes sense for them, and there’s not an easy way to countries against Russia can reduce their own usage of refined oil in the near term.

      Ultimately, time well tell whether these attacks are having a strong impact on global refined oil.

      EDIT: one thing that they do mention, that counteracts my point above is the fact that Russia exporting additional unrefined oil, that would mean unrefined oil pricing would decrease, which could counteract the reduction in production of refined oil.