Environment

In this article

Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during the Russian Energy Week event on October 13, 2021 in Moscow, Russia.
Mikhail Svetlov | Getty Images

Russian President Vladimir Putin thinks cryptocurrencies have value — but he’s not convinced they can replace the U.S. dollar in settling oil trades.

Some months ago, Russia’s deputy prime minister, Alexander Novak, suggested the country could move away from greenback-denominated crude contracts if the U.S. continues to impose targeted economic sanctions.

Asked whether bitcoin or another cryptocurrency could be used as an alternative to the dollar, Putin said it’s “too early to talk about the trade of energy resources in crypto.”

“I believe that it has value,” he told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble at the Russian Energy Week event in Moscow Wednesday. “But I don’t believe it can be used in the oil trade.”

“Cryptocurrency is not supported by anything as of yet,” Putin said. “It may exist as a means of payment, but I think it’s too early to say about the oil trade in cryptocurrency.”

The Russian leader also flagged cryptocurrencies’ massive consumption of energy as a potential barrier to their use. Bitcoin requires lots of computing power to process transactions and mint new tokens.

However, Putin didn’t mince words on Russia’s attempt to move away from reliance on the dollar.

“I believe the U.S. makes a huge mistake in using the dollar as a sanction instrument,” he said. “We are forced. We have no other choice but to move to transactions in other currencies.”

“In this regard, we can say the United States bites the hand that feeds it,” Putin added. “This dollar is a competitive advantage. It is a universal reserve currency, and the United States today uses it to pursue political goals, and they harm their strategic and economic interests as a result.”

In June, Russia announced it would drop U.S. dollar assets from its sovereign wealth fund.

Articles You May Like

‘Iran is in for the long haul’ with oil tanker hijacks, expert says, as U.S. considers more sanctions
Critical incident after reports of multiple stabbings at shopping centre in Sydney
Tired City in ‘big, big trouble’ due to injuries – Pep
Apple iPhone first-quarter shipments sink as Chinese challengers rise; Samsung regains top spot
Biden suggests cannibals may have eaten war hero uncle in WWII – in apparent swipe at Trump