Russian crude oil prices have progressed rapidly since the  end of June, surpassing the G7 price cap on July 12 for Urals and July 7 for Siberian Light grades, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said based on  data from Argus and Kpler.
In response to Russia's war with Ukraine, the G7,  European Union, and Australia collectively enforced a limit of $60/bbl on  seaborne exports of Russian crude oil, which was put into effect in December  of the previous year. 
According to Argus assessments, July’s weighted average free-on-board (FOB) price for seaborne Russian crude exports rose $8.84/bbl to  $64.41/bbl. All Russian seaborne export grades sold at $70/bbl or higher by  early August. 
Despite North Sea Dated prices rising $5/bbl month-on-month  (m-o-m), price discounts versus the marker for Russian crudes narrowed by  around $4/bbl for Urals in both the Baltic and Black Sea to around -$18.75/bbl  in July and just -$16/bbl at the start of August. 
“Urals price strength versus the light sweet European marker  reflects heightening sour grade supply tensions following OPEC+ supply cuts and  a post-maintenance rise in refinery demand. Russian plans to extend export cuts  in August and September have contributed to lift prices. Falling freight rates  also supported FOB prices versus the delivered terms,” IEA said.
In June and July, Russian exports of crude and refined  products remained around 680,000 b/d below their March-May average. With the  end of Russian refinery maintenance, cuts to crude exports widened to 430,000 b/d in July  from 220,000  b/d while the 450,000 b/d fall in product exports  narrowed to 250,000 b/d in July.
Prices for Urals delivered to West Coast India rose  $8.64/bbl m-o-m in July to $72.73/bbl (-$8.04/bbl versus Dubai) and $80.01/bbl  in the first days of August (-$5.80/bbl versus Dubai). Indian buyers now only  get a discount versus Dubai of just one-third of the first-quarter 2023 level  (around -$16/bbl at that time). Argus freight data indicate shipping costs for  Russian Urals from Baltic ports to the West Coast of India fell by around  $1.25/bbl m-o-m in July. 
Despite flat overall volumes, Russian oil export revenues  rose by $2.5 billion in July m-o-m to $15.3 billion, reaching their highest  level since November 2022. The rebound reflects rising international oil prices  combined with narrowing discounts for Russian crude and products versus  international benchmarks, according to IEA data.