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Lescure: G7 finance leaders are ready to act on Iran war fallout.

French Finance Minister Roland Lescure announced on Thursday that the Group of Seven finance and central bank chiefs had agreed to be ready to "act" to reduce economic and inflation risk caused by Middle 'East war energy price and supply fluctuations.

Lescure told reporters at the International Monetary Fund's and World Bank's spring meetings that the outcome of the global economy depends on the speed with which the conflict is resolved.

The International Energy Agency, with the support of the G7, released last month a record-breaking amount of oil from its strategic reserves in order to counter the cuts of supplies from Gulf nations through the Strait of Hormuz.

Lescure, after the G7 Finance Ministers' and Central Bank Governors' meetings on Wednesday and Thursday said: "We must ensure that we know where the balance of risks will be in the coming weeks."

Lescure added, "We will be meeting again in Paris in one month and we'll make sure we monitor the situation, evaluate the impact, and if necessary, act as we did when we released inventories just a few weeks ago."

France is the G7 president this year. The industrialized democracies includes the United States, Canada, Japan and Britain.

Francois Villeroy de Galhau, Governor of the Bank of France, added that the G7 central banks had also committed to taking steps to prevent Iran's war-related energy and commodities shocks from being embedded in core inflation second and third round price impacts.

We will act without hesitation if necessary. But we're not in a hurry. We need more data about the impact on the prices of the shocks.

Lescure stated that the G7 leaders met for the first time this year in person and also promised to continue aiding Ukraine. This includes helping Ukraine prepare for winter next year after a tough?winter? this year due to constant Russian attacks against Ukrainian energy infrastructure.

Lescure stated that "Ukraine shouldn't be collateral damage of the war in Iran." "Russia can't benefit from what is happening in Iran."

Scott Bessent of the U.S. Treasury Department, who missed Thursday's G7 summit on critical minerals, said on Wednesday that he wouldn't renew a temporary waiver for 30 days on sanctions against Russian oil stranded in the sea. The waiver expired on April 11 and was intended to relieve price pressures through the release of more oil onto global markets.

G7 finance leaders discussed creating 'alternative supply chain' for rare earths, and other critical minerals. This would reduce the countries' dependence on China as the dominant supplier. He stated that the group will continue to work on "very tangible steps" which could be presented at a G7 meeting in Evian-les-Bains, a French Alpine spa city in June. (Reporting and editing by Andrea Ricci; David Lawder)

(source: Reuters)