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China and India Refuse to Unload Russian Oil as Tankers Pile Up at Sea — UNITED24 Media

Russia’s Oil Revenues Are in a Free Fall: Down $25 Billion in 2025, Crude Sells for Half Price

China and India have not allowed at least 20 tankers carrying Russian crude to unload at their ports, as a growing volume of Russian oil remains at sea amid tightening restrictions on shipments, according to The Moscow Times on December 23. 

The Moscow Times, citing vessel-tracking data, reported that Russia shipped an average of 3.87 million barrels per day of crude oil in the four weeks to December 21, the highest level since May 2023.

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Despite more cargoes struggling to discharge and some vessels waiting for buyers willing to accept steeper discounts, the amount of Russian oil held on tankers at sea increased 48% from late August to 185 million barrels.

The buildup has coincided with weaker Russian export prices. The Moscow Times reported that Urals crude was trading around $33-$34 a barrel, compared with Brent  at about $61-$62, after a prolonged slide in Russian benchmark prices.

Earlier, it was reported that Qingdao port operators would bar older or higher-risk vessels from berthing under new rules that could constrain shipments of sanctioned oil.

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