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The US has loosened sanctions on other countries buying Russian oil we'll be talking about if those measures are enough to keep a lid on energy prices. And the smart toys struggling with toddlers emotions, why researchers are raising concerns on those.
Presenter: Sarah Rogers Producer: Victoriya Holland Editor: Stephen Ryan
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The United States is allowing the sale of some Russian oil
to train rain in global energy prices.
It's world business express from the BBC World Service.
I'm Sarah Rogers.
We'll also hear from a captain of a ship stuck
in the Strait of Hormuz and away from that conflict,
what a AI powered toys teaching toddlers.
Hello, yes, US President Trump has loosened sanctions
on countries buying Russian oil
to try and keep a lid on rising energy prices.
The European Union says it's deeply concerned
here's Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
Once again, we believe this is the wrong decision.
There is currently a price problem, but not a supply problem.
And in that regard, I would like to know what additional motives
led the US government to make this decision.
Well, let's find out a bit more about that with the BBC's Nick Marsh.
Let's assign that the US is concerned about the rising price of oil.
It's currently at around $100 a barrel.
So this is an issue because the higher the price of oil is,
then the higher the price of everything is.
Therefore, ordinary Americans people all around the world
suddenly face a higher cost of living.
So saying to countries, yes, you can buy sanctioned Russian oil
for 30 days.
It's oil that specifically stranded at sea.
Have all these Russian tankers.
Saying to countries, yeah, you can do this.
Is an attempt to try and increase the supply
and to try and ease fears among oil traders.
We actually saw last week the US issue a waiver to India specifically.
They made an agreement with India.
And India said it would stop buying Russian oil.
The US kind of went back on that and said, no, you can carry on.
Now, this is all coming about because the US
Israel war with Iran has all but closed the strait of Hormuz
the rich around a fifth of the world's oil and seaborne gas tankers pass.
That pushed prices of Brent crude, which is a benchmark for oil
up past $100 a barrel this week.
So now as Nick said there, Russian oil in transit,
which has been subject to sanctions since Russia invaded Ukraine,
can now be sold.
But how much oil is there and where is it?
I asked Nick Coleman from the investment advisory firm Prism Strategic Intelligence.
There was an estimated 30 million barrels of oil sitting in oil tankers
off the coast of India at the end of February.
Your average large oil tanker might hold a million barrels of oil
or a bit less than that.
So you'd be thinking about 30, 40 tankers of Russian oil
hesitating about unloading because the Trump administration has imposed
lots of tariffs and measures to discourage this trade.
But now that seems to have been lifted.
A lot of that oil will go into India now, I think,
and other destinations around the world.
So Russia has said that it's got about 100 million barrels of oil.
Can you put that into context for us?
How much is that globally?
How long would that last?
So globally, if that was all of the oil that was available to the world,
that would last for one day.
They've announced this measure just for one month,
right, until April 11th.
And then everything's supposed to go back to where it did before.
But really, if the conflict in the Middle East goes on longer,
then they could just extend these easing measures,
easing sanctions on Russia.
And so Russia's been pushing up the price because it's now in demand.
How much is Russia going to benefit from this?
Russia was suffering from severe kind of discounting of its oil
until now.
So oil was selling at prices way below normal sort of global
Brent prices, if you like.
And now those discounts have been closing up
and Russia's getting much better price.
And do you think this just opens the door on Russian oil in the long term?
It's a step in that direction.
I think Ukraine, for one, will be trying to maintain the pressure
militarily on Russia.
And they can do a lot of damage.
We saw quite a big attack on an oil terminal in Novo-de-Sis,
which caused about a week of shutdown of exports from that port.
That was Nick Coleman from Prism Strategic Intelligence.
With me, I have Randi Epsomel,
the fund manager at MNG Investments.
Earlier US Treasury Secretary Scott Besson said this was aimed at promoting
stability in global energy markets.
Randi P, is it?
What we really need now is that it's
to be open again.
And so how are we compared to last week in terms of the markets?
Are they bracing for a longer more sustained impact now?
They are. I mean, 20% of global seaborn oils comes from the
state of her moves and countries like not just Iran,
but Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
It needs to be open in order for that free, free flowing oil
to get back onto the market without it.
We are likely to see the oil price continue to rise.
Okay, thank you, Randi Epsomel, from MNG Investments.
Now, a bit other around two weeks ago,
you might not have been aware of the straight of homies or how important it is.
Now we can hear from there the BBC has made contact with a South Korean ship
unable to sail through the strait.
The words of Captain Choi Woon have been voiced by one of our reporters.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is now blocking the straits.
We're unable to sail and are now waiting while en route to Dubai.
At the moment, we have enough food and water for about 38 days,
but if this situation continues, we'll need to be resupplied.
There's a saying that when whales fight, it's the shrimp that gets hurt.
And in this case, it's the powerless seafarers who've lost their way.
Seafarers are meant to work hard, yet now they have nowhere to go.
So what I want to say is we must love one another.
We should not hate. That's the message I want to leave.
Well, that message there from Captain Choi Woon.
But there are reports of ships going through the strait despite threats of being attacked.
The UN's International Maritime Organization will hold an emergency meeting next week
at its London headquarters.
Its boss, or Sanio Dominguez, had this warning for ship owners.
The area is just too risky.
I call on all ship owners and ship operators actually not to sail to the region if necessary.
One of the challenges right now is to identify the vessels.
The reason is for it, some of them are turning off their satellite navigation systems,
in order not to be detected.
So the time that we get the information of where they are, they have already sailed through.
Then, of course, some of them are hiding their identity in order, again, to seek protection.
So right now, what we're working on is in particularly the main ship owners,
ship operator agencies, the represents the sector in order to highlight the importance
of following guidance that we have put in place in order to safeguard the vessels
as much as possible during these high risk situations.
And then, avoid the transit at all costs.
As well, people in Moscow and other major Russian cities are reportedly going analogue
to stay connected, following internet disruption there.
Media reports using data from wild berries, which is a large online retailer, says
sales of walkie-talkies rose 27%, pages 73%, and paper maps of Moscow nearly tripled at the
start of March.
The Kremlin says that restrictions on mobile communications were for safety reasons
due to Ukrainian attacks.
Now, we talk a lot about AI on world business express and what it might hold for the future.
Well, today, scientists at Cambridge University in Britain have called for tighter regulations
on toys powered by artificial intelligence.
Researchers have conducted one of the world's first tests on how children,
under five, interact with the tech, using a cuddly chat, what?
Called Gabbo.
Hi there. How are you today?
We good.
What's something you love to see?
A unicorn.
Unicorns are magical preachers.
If you could imagine riding on a unicorn, where would you go?
A unicorn, that's okay.
They found that children struggled to chat with it because it talked over them as three-year-old
Maya who took part in the small trial found out just there.
The concern is that when children are learning about social interaction and cues,
generative AI could be confusing and you can read that full story online from our technology editor,
Zoe Kleinman at bbc.com.
Okay, but that's it from world business express with me, Sarah Rogers.
Do subscribe though to get the latest search for world business express.
The best b2b marketing gets wasted on the wrong people.
So when you want to reach the right professionals, use LinkedIn ads.
LinkedIn has grown to a network of over one billion professionals,
including 130 million decision makers.
And that's where it stands apart from other ad buys.
You can target your buyers by job title, industry,
company, role, seniority, skills, company revenue.
So you can stop wasting budget on the wrong audience.
It's why LinkedIn ads generates the highest b2b return on ad spend of major ad networks.
Spend $250 on your first campaign on LinkedIn ads and get $250 credit for the next one.
Just go to LinkedIn.com slash broadcast.
That's LinkedIn.com slash broadcast.
Terms and conditions apply.

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