Brent crude futures surged past the $70 per barrel mark on Tuesday, climbing by 1.34% to settle at $70.98 as geopolitical tensions reignited risk premiums across global oil markets. The upward rally was driven largely by fresh secondary sanctions threats issued by U.S. President Donald Trump against buyers of Russian energy, in a renewed push to tighten the noose on Moscow over its stalled Ukraine ceasefire negotiations.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) followed suit, climbing 1.48% to $67.70, while Murban crude posted the strongest gain of the day at 1.87%, closing at $73.98. Natural gas prices also spiked 2.78% to $3.071/MMBtu amid tightening supply in Europe and North America.
Trump’s Sanctions Rhetoric Reignites Market Anxiety
The oil market, already grappling with fragile fundamentals, reacted sharply to Trump’s remarks, which included a veiled warning of secondary sanctions on countries continuing energy ties with Russia. His shortened deadline for a diplomatic resolution in Ukraine added to investor anxiety, injecting fresh geopolitical risk into already jittery trading sessions.
Market analysts noted that the possibility of enforcement on secondary sanctions could significantly reshape global oil flows by deterring purchases of Russian crude and refined products. This could particularly impact India, China, and select European nations that have maintained commercial links with Russian suppliers despite the ongoing war.
“If implemented, these secondary sanctions could trigger a major supply shift, removing a substantial volume of Russian oil from global markets,” said Temitope Adebayo, an oil markets analyst at Lagos-based Enegix Advisory. “That would tighten fundamentals further and support higher crude prices in the near term.”
OPEC+ Urges Stricter Quota Compliance
Adding fuel to the bullish sentiment, the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) of OPEC+ issued a rare warning over non-compliance ahead of the group’s scheduled full meeting this weekend. Member countries that have exceeded production quotas have been asked to submit compensation plans by 18 August, reinforcing the group’s intent to tighten supply discipline.
Brent’s breakout above $70 marks a psychological threshold, reflecting not just geopolitical tension but also the market’s ongoing recalibration of supply-demand balances amid varied regional fundamentals. According to traders, tighter OPEC+ production management combined with disruption risks in Russia and Norway continue to support bullish sentiment.
US-China Trade Optimism Adds Momentum
Oil markets also found support in renewed hopes of progress in US-China trade negotiations. Trump’s recent breakthrough deal with the European Union raised expectations of a similar compromise with Beijing. Analysts believe improved relations between the world’s two largest economies could accelerate global energy demand recovery, especially in petrochemical and transportation sectors.
“An easing in US-China tensions could boost industrial activity and cross-border trade, ultimately lifting demand for crude and refined products globally,” said David Ayodeji, an energy economist at Abuja-based FutureFront Energy.
Supply Risks Mount in Europe and Asia
Supply-side issues continued to compound the price rally. In Norway, Equinor extended a maintenance shutdown at its Hammerfest LNG terminal Europe’s largest until 3 August due to compressor faults, further tightening LNG availability. Meanwhile, Russia imposed a full ban on gasoline exports through the end of August to contain domestic price inflation, risking potential fuel shortages in dependent markets.
Elsewhere, Qatar threatened to cut LNG deliveries to Europe over Brussels’ new corporate sustainability regulations, a move that could add significant pressure on Europe’s winter gas stockpiling efforts.
Volatility to Remain Elevated
Despite the bullish run, industry watchers caution that market volatility remains elevated, with political risk now exerting stronger influence on price direction than core fundamentals. Traders are closely monitoring the outcome of the upcoming OPEC+ meeting, developments in US sanctions enforcement, and Chinese import behaviour in the coming weeks.
“The market is clearly in a risk-on phase, but price resilience will depend on whether rhetoric turns into policy action,” said Adebayo.
As of today, the global energy landscape continues to be shaped as much by politics as by supply-demand metrics a reminder that crude prices are often as much a function of diplomacy as of geology.
Key Crude Price Summary (July 29, 2025):
- Brent Crude: $70.98 (+1.34%)
- WTI Crude: $67.70 (+1.48%)
- Murban Crude: $73.98 (+1.87%)
- Natural Gas (Henry Hub): $3.071/MMBtu (+2.78%)


