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Why the Russia, Ukraine crisis will see you pay more for fuel

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The crisis in Ukraine will have you paying more for fuel after oil prices climbed to a new, all-time high

Oil prices are climbing on fears that the Ukraine-Russia crisis will disrupt supplies across the world.

The price of Brent crude reached a seven-year high of $97.65 USD a barrel on Tuesday following an announcement by Russian President Putin ordering troops into two rebel-held regions in Ukraine’s east after it recognised them as independent states.

The UK and several western allies have threatened sanctions on Russia.

WASHINGTON, DC – MAY 13: U.S. President Joe Biden

Russia is the second largest oil exporter after Saudi Arabia

The Kremlin has stated that its troops will engage in “peacekeeping” in the self-declared Donetsk and Luhansk people’s republics – but those comments have been met with questions by the west, with the US calling such peacekeeper comments “nonsense”.

The White House says that Russia is creating a pretext for war.

Russia is also the world’s top producer of natural gas

A report by the BBC stated that sanctions forcing Russia to supply less crude or natural gas would have “important impact on the global economy.”

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