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For months after Ukraine's Western allies limited sales of Russian oil to $60 per barrel, the price cap was still largely symbolic. That time has now come, putting the price cap to its most serious test so far and underlining its weaknesses. But most of that, economists say, stems from Europe's ban on Russian oil, which cost Moscow its main customer. The U.K. Treasury says it is "actively undertaking a number of investigations into suspected breaches of the oil price cap." "And there's a reason why the shippers haven't really complained or haven't flagged any issues with the oil price cap — because it's very easily circumvented."
Persons: , Hilgenstock, P Global Platts, It's, Benjamin Hilgenstock, Vladimir Putin, They're, Viktor Katona, haven't, Alexander Novak, Putin, Novak, Europe —, Craig Kennedy, doesn't, Nataliia Shapoval, Shapoval Organizations: Salym Petroleum, U.S . Treasury Department, Stanford University, Research, Energy, Clean, P Global, Kyiv School of Economics, International Monetary Fund, Russia, U.S . Treasury, United Arab Emirates, Treasury, Radio Business, Harvard's Davis Center for Russian, Studies, Kyiv, Stanford, Tanker Locations: Salym, Russia, Ukraine, Israel, U.S, Moscow, Helsinki, Saudi Arabia, Ukrainian, Europe, Kozmino, Turkey, India, Russian, Asia
Feb 17 (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday signed a decree allowing Gazprom Neft (SIBN.MM) (GPN) to take over Shell's (SHEL.L) 50% stake in the Salym oil project, a deal that had been provisionally agreed in December. But the decree, posted on the government's website, did not say whether Shell would receive any money. Shell - which announced the deal earlier this month - had already written down the value of its stake with an impairment of $233 million last year. Its directors resigned from the project last July. Reporting by David LjunggrenOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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