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On March 29th, it was learned from the Beijing Financial Regulatory Bureau that Beijing has taken the lead nationwide in launching the development and application of commercial insurance products for intelligent connected new energy vehicles. The new products largely follow the existing new energy commercial vehicle insurance system, adhering to the principle of "overall stability with partial optimization." They primarily provide risk protection for specific intelligent driving scenarios and software/hardware losses that are of concern to consumers and automakers, and can be uniformly adapted to all levels of intelligent connected new energy vehicles from L2 to L4. For example, existing car insurance products mainly define drivers based on the basic scenario of "human driving," which is not fully applicable to L3 and L4 level "human-machine co-driving" or "machine driving" scenarios. Furthermore, for L2 level assisted driving vehicles, some consumers upgrade their assisted driving systems at their own expense after purchasing a new car, but existing car insurance products do not cover this portion of the loss, requiring further optimization.According to Iranian state media, Iranian Parliament Speaker Qaribaf stated that the United States talks about negotiations in public but is secretly planning a ground offensive.On March 29, local time, a U.S. military KC-135R aerial refueling tanker encountered an emergency during a mission and was forced to return to Tel Aviv, Israel.The Israel Defense Forces have detected another ballistic missile launch by Iran. Alarms are expected to sound in southern Israel within the next few minutes.On March 29, South Korean Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance and Economy Koo Yoon-cheol stated that if international oil prices rise to $120 to $130 per barrel, the government is likely to activate a Level 3 resource security crisis alert, and the vehicle license plate number restriction measures will be expanded to include the private sector.

The Russian demand for Rouble payments for gas complicates the EU-Russia energy standoff

Aria Thomas

Mar 31, 2022 10:16

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has directed the government to advise state-owned gas monopolist Gazprom to change existing contracts so that "unfriendly countries," including EU member states, begin paying for Russian natural gas imports in roubles. The Bank of Russia (CBR) will develop a mechanism for processing such payments.


Short-term rouble assistance will come at the price of Russia pressing the European Union to reduce its reliance on Russian energy imports as soon as possible – albeit this will take time given the infrastructure restrictions in the natural gas sector in particular.


Russia seems to have a little financial edge.


Since sanctions froze about half of Russia's abroad reserves, Russia has already compelled exporters to sell 80 percent of their currency revenues in order to boost the rouble. In the case of gas exports, forcing buyers of Russian natural gas to exchange hard money for roubles elevates the rate of rouble conversion to 100 percent.


However, Gazprom's foreign-currency selling obligation may have been increased to 100% in any event. The transition to rouble demand payments is a strategic retaliation against the EU based on Russia's dominance as Europe's biggest supplier of natural gas, with Russian supplies accounting for more than 75 percent of aggregate gas demand in some countries in central and eastern Europe.


The Russian administration is also attempting to strengthen the CBR's capacity to manage the currency by requiring natural gas trades to be conducted in domestic currency and directing major foreign-currency flows through the CBR, a sign of how financial sanctions have harmed the central bank's role in steering the Russian economy.


Rouble payments for gas may increase the CBR's capacity to function under the existing sanctions regime, given the CBR's current limits on its ability to deal with European Union central banks.


The EU is confronting growing energy trade complexity as well as the possibility of gas supply disruption.

Russia's new demand may result in gas contract renegotiation and changes in contract terms, as well as legal challenges if EU countries think the conversion is a breach of contract. Around 58 percent of Gazprom's gas sales to Europe and other countries are paid in euros, with the remaining 39 percent paid in dollars. Any legal stalemate increases the risk of Russian exports to Europe being stopped, which might be unpleasant for certain countries in the short term.


Russia's recent limitations are anticipated to speed the EU's efforts to diversify away from Russian oil and gas in the long run. The European Commission has proposed a strategy to wean Europe from Russian fossil resources by 2030. This approach might cut demand for Russian gas by two-thirds by the end of the year. In the medium term, the Russian strategy may lead to the EU defining lower purchase volumes of Russian gas.