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Oil rises by 2% after Russian port suspends oil imports following Ukrainian attack

The oil prices rose around 2% Friday due to supply concerns after Novorossiysk, the Black Sea port, stopped oil exports in response to a drone attack by Ukraine that targeted an oil depot at the main Russian energy hub.

Brent crude futures rose $1.50 or 2.4% to $64.51 per barrel at 1115 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude gained $1.57 or 2.7% to $60.26 per barrel.

Officials in Russia said that the attack on Friday damaged a vessel in port, apartment buildings and an oil depot at Novorossiysk. Three members of the crew were injured.

Two industry sources said that the port has halted oil exports, and Transneft, the oil pipeline monopoly, has suspended crude oil supplies to outlet.

"These attacks are more frequent and intense." Giovanni Staunovo is a commodity analyst with UBS.

He said that the market is attempting to determine the impact of recent attacks on Russian supply and the longer-term implications.

According to industry sources, crude oil exports via Novorossiysk in October reached 3,22 million tonnes or 761,000 barrels per day. A total of 1.794 millions tonnes of oil products were exported.

Brent is up about 1% this week while WTI has risen 0.8%.

Prices rose after Brent and WTI both fell about 3% Wednesday. This was due to a report from OPEC that predicted global oil supplies would meet demand by 2026.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration announced on Thursday that crude oil stocks in the United States rose more than expected last week. However, gasoline and distillate stockpiles fell less than anticipated.

The EIA reported that crude inventories increased by 6.4 millions barrels, to 427.6million barrels during the week ending November 7. This was in contrast with poll expectations of a gain 1.96 million barrels.

Investors also watch the impact of Western sanctions against Russian oil and trade flows.

As part of its efforts to get the Kremlin into peace talks on Ukraine, the U.S. has imposed sanctions that prohibit deals with Russian oil firms Lukoil or Rosneft.

JPMorgan reported on Thursday that the U.S. sanctions on Rosneft, Lukoil and other Russian oil companies have slowed down unloading, resulting in an increase of about 1.4 million barrels of Russian oil per day, or nearly a third of its seaborne export capacity.

The bank said that after November 21, the oil companies will no longer be able to supply cargoes. Reporting by Anna Hirtenstein, London. Sam Li and Siyi Liu contributed additional reporting from Beijing and Singapore. Clarence Fernandez and Elaine Hardcastle edited the story.

(source: Reuters)