"The unintended consequences or unexpected consequences would be a rise, but it's a more complex story because the oil market at the moment is also a story not just about the oil embargo, which has been imposed, but also about people's expectations for the global economy," Ostwald warned. "And on that basis, the oil market is coming under a lot of pressure. And that's actually definitely overriding any impact from the oil embargo."
Thierry Bros, professor at the Paris Institute of Political Studies and a contributor to Natural Gas World, told Sputnik: "This is unprecedented. The G7 and EU imposed an embargo on Russian oil to try not to finance the Russian military. But the world cannot do without Russia, which is the [third] largest world producer and the first largest exporter [in terms of all oil products]. We cannot afford to lose the 2.5 million barrels per day of Russian oil and oil products (50/50) that are exported to the EU."