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Putin orders regulated prices for fuel oil in some Russian regions 
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a plenary session as part of the 3rd International Olympiad on Financial Security in the Sirius Park of Science and Art in Krasnodar region October 4, 2023. — Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool pic via Reuters

MOSCOW, Oct 5 — Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered the government to provide state funds to ensure a smooth heating season, including the introduction of regulated prices for fuel oil supplied for household heating in some regions, the Kremlin said today.

Russia has been tackling shortages and high fuel prices in recent month. Fuel oil is in high demand for the Arctic and other regions, which are facing a severe winter.

The document, published on the Kremlin web site, said the government will provide funds for Murmansk and other Arctic regions to prepare for the heating season of 2023/2024, and for "the introduction of price regulation for fuel oil supplied for the heating season”.

Despite being one of the world’s top oil producers, Russia has suffered high domestic prices and shortages of gasoline and diesel in recent months as high export prices made it advantageous for refiners to sell their products abroad.

Russia on September 21 introduced a ban on fuel exports to fight high gasoline and diesel prices as well as fuel shortages during harvesting season. There is no time frame for the restrictions to be lifted.

Since the ban was introduced, wholesale diesel prices on the local exchange have fallen by 21 per cent, while gasoline prices are down 10 per cent.

That has not yet translated into the same scale of retail prices decline, while Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, Putin’s point man on the oil business, has said that the ban has started to yield positive results.

The Federal Anti-Monopoly Service (FAS) said today that it had sent instructions to oil companies ordering them to cut oil products prices.

"In the absence of measures taken by organizations, FAS will consider them as signs of a violation of antimonopoly legislation,” it said in a statement. — Reuters

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