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Source: US Treasury will extend sanctions waiver on Russian oil shipped by sea

A source familiar with this decision confirmed on Monday that the U.S. Treasury would extend its waiver of sanctions on Russian'seaborne oil', which expired 'on Saturday. Several countries had asked for a longer period to purchase it. Source: The waiver, which will last for another 30 days, was requested by several poor countries that were cut off from Gulf Oil supplies due to the Iran War and the closing of the "Strait of Hormuz". Source declined to identify the countries that requested the extension. This is the second time that the Treasury has let the sanctions waiver lapse, and then subsequently extended it. The waiver was issued first in March to alleviate oil shortages and reduce price spikes caused by U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran.

The move has not reduced oil prices much, but it has helped India. India was one of the biggest buyers of Russian crude oil before the U.S. imposed severe sanctions on Russian oil companies to pressure Moscow for its war in Ukraine.

The benchmark Brent oil futures price?rose 1.5% on Monday to $111 per barrel. This was due to the continued supply concerns that outweighed the Russian waiver and the report by an Iranian news agency?that the U.S. is considering lifting temporary sanctions against Iranian oil in?negotiations about peace talks?.

Scott Bessent of the U.S. Treasury Department, who is attending a meeting of finance leaders of the Group of Seven in Paris, said that he wants G7 and allies to enforce Iran sanctions more strongly.

Bessent said to reporters: "We urge all G7 members, as well as allies and the rest of the world, to adopt the sanctions regime so that we may 'crackdown on illicit financing that fuels the Iranian war machines and return this money to the Iranian people." (Reporting and writing by David Lawder, Makini Brice, Editing by Aidan Lewis).

(source: Reuters)