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London — Oil prices slipped on Friday, with some supply concerns easing after a partial export resumption from Kazakhstan’s CPC crude terminal, while the EU remained split on whether to impose an oil embargo on Russia.

Brent crude fell $1.29, or 1.1%, to $117.74 a barrel at 10.49am GMT and US West Texas Intermediate crude slid $1.80, or 1.6%, to $110.54 after both had dropped more than 2% the previous session.

Despite the fall, both benchmarks were heading for their first weekly gain in three weeks. Brent was on track for a 9% jump and WTI for a 6% rise as broader supply concerns sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine underpinned the market.

Concerns were heightened after the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) terminal on Russia’s Black Sea coast stopped exports on Wednesday after being damaged by a storm.

The terminal partially resumed oil loadings on Friday, according to two sources familiar with the process and shipping data on Refinitiv Eikon.

The US and Britain, both less reliant on Russian oil than the EU , have imposed bans on Russian crude. The EU, which is heavily dependent on Russian oil and gas, faces a bigger dilemma over whether to impose sanctions on the sector.

“As the single largest buyer of Russian oil, the more rapidly Europe seeks to cut Russia’s imports, the higher global oil prices will rise,” JPMorgan analysts said in a note.

Opec sources said the producer group’s officials believe that a possible EU ban on Russian oil would hurt consumers and that it had conveyed its concerns to Brussels.

With global stockpiles at their lowest since 2014, analysts said the market remained vulnerable to any supply shock.

Prices were also pressured by the potential for another co-ordinated release of oil from storage by the US and its allies to help to calm oil markets.

Responding to market volatility, the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) raised margins for Brent futures by 19% for the May contract from Friday, the third rise this year.

Futures margin rates are increased when markets are volatile and the move makes transactions more expensive because it forces traders to increase the deposit they hold at the exchange for each contract to prove they can deliver on obligations.

In a bid to ease gas supply worries, the US said it will work to ensure additional liquefied natural gas (LNG) volumes for the EU market of at least 15-billion cubic metres (bcm) in 2022, with increases expected in the future.

Reuters

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