Thursday, March 03, 2022

The world could be on the brink of an energy crisis rivaling the 1970s, says IHS Markit's Yergin

Patti Domm 

Russia's Ukraine invasion could have set in motion an energy market disruption on the scale of major oil crises in the 1970s, according to Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Markit.

Sanctions by the U.S. and allies on Russia's financial system have disrupted sales of Russian oil, with banks and buyers wary of running afoul of the punitive measures.

"This could be the worst crisis since the Arab oil embargo and the Iranian revolution in the 1970s," said Yergin.

© Provided by CNBC A driver holds a fuel nozzle at a Shell gas station in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Friday, Feb. 25, 2022.

Russia's Ukraine invasion could have set in motion an energy market disruption on the scale of major oil crises in the 1970s, according to Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Markit.

Moscow is one of the world's largest oil exporters. Sanctions by the U.S. and allies on Russia's financial system have already set in motion a backlash against Russian crude from banks, buyers and shippers.

Yergin, also an author and energy market historian, said even though Russian energy was not sanctioned by the U.S. and other countries, there could be a large loss of Russian barrels from the market. The country exports about 7.5 million barrels a day of oil and refined products, he noted.

"This is going to be a really big disruption in terms of logistics, and people are going to be scrambling for barrels," Yergin said. "This is a supply crisis. It's a logistics crisis. It's a payment crisis, and this could well be on the scale of the 1970s."

He said strong communications between governments imposing the sanctions and the industry could head off a worst-case scenario. "Governments need to provide clarity," Yergin said.

He noted that members of NATO receive about half of Russia's exports. "Some share of that is going to be disrupted," Yergin said.

Wariness toward Russian oil

Yergin said there are "de facto" sanctions working to keep Russian oil from the market, even though energy was not specifically sanctioned. Buyers are wary of Russian oil because of pushback from banks, ports and shipping companies that do not want to run afoul of sanctions.

JPMorgan estimates that 66% of Russian oil is struggling to find buyers, and that crude prices could reach $185 by the end of the year if Russian oil remains disrupted.

"This could be the worst crisis since the Arab oil embargo and the Iranian revolution in the 1970s," Yergin said. Both events were major oil shocks in that decade.

In 1973, Middle Eastern oil producers cut off supply from the U.S. and other Western countries in retaliation for assisting Israel during the Arab-Israeli war that year. Oil was immediately in short supply, and Americans lined up at gas stations to buy skyrocketing gasoline. The other shock was the result of the 1978-1979 Iran revolution, which led to the overthrow of the Shah of Iran.

Oil majors, like BP and Exxon Mobil have said they are exiting Russian ventures. The price of Russia's Ural crude has fallen sharply, compared with the international benchmark Brent crude.

"What we haven't seen before is the big reputational issue as well, companies not wanting to do business with Russia," said Yergin. Oil companies are giving up major investments, where they may have spent years developing operations and employed hundreds of people in Russia.

"Vladimir Putin in a week has destroyed what he spent 22 years building, an economy that was basically integrated with the global economy. Now what's happened is Russia is unplugged from the global economy," he said.

An approaching disruption


Yergin said the disruption is coming when the market is already tightly supplied. OPEC+, an alliance between OPEC, Russia and others, decided Wednesday to continue their current production plans. They are returning about 400,000 barrels a day to the market each month until they reach their target in June.

Also adding to the pain for Russia's customers has been the spike in European natural gas prices. Europe is the biggest customer for both Russian oil and gas.

Oil prices were already rising when Russia rolled its tanks into Ukraine last Thursday. Brent was trading above $116 per barrel Thursday before backing off amid speculation that Iran may reach a deal to reenter its nuclear deal. That could bring 1 million barrels of Iranian oil back to the market.

Industry analysts say it is difficult to tell how much Russian oil will be affected. The White House said while there are no sanctions on energy, they are on the table.

IHS Markit hosts the annual CERAWeek energy conference in Houston next week. Executives from many energy companies, including Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Total, Occidental Petroleum and ConocoPhillips, will be speaking, and a major topic at the conference is expected to be how Russian barrels will be replaced.

"I think you're talking about losing 2 to 3 million barrels a day," said John Kilduff, partner at Again Capital. Bank of America has estimated that for every million barrels lost from the market, the price of Brent could rise by $20 per barrel.

Kilduff said he expects Russian pipeline oil to continue to flow to China. Beijing said it will not join sanctions against Russia.

Analysts have said crude that is carried by ships is more likely to be wanting for buyers.

"This time we're cutting off the oil ourselves. It's a self-inflicted embargo," said Kilduff. "It's a buyers' strike this time, not suppliers acting out. ... If you can't finance it and you can't get it paid for there's no way the Russians are going to sell it."




Grain Markets Set for Supply Shock of a Lifetime, Economist Says

Elizabeth Elkin
Wed, March 2, 2022



(Bloomberg) -- Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could devastate global grain markets so deeply that it’s likely to be the biggest supply shock in living memory.

That’s according to Scott Irwin, an agricultural economist at the University of Illinois. Tens of millions of acres of grain production are at stake, he said Wednesday on Twitter.

“I am convinced it is going to be the biggest supply shock to global grain markets in my lifetime,” Irwin said.

The world “desperately” needs farmers to plant more acres in 2022, he said, but “basically nothing can be done in the short-run except to run up the price of grain high enough to ration demand.”

Ukraine and Russia together account for more than a quarter of the global trade in wheat, as well as a fifth of corn sales. Prices for those staple crops are soaring on concerns over supply disruptions at a time when global food prices had already reached record highs.

Even before Russia’s war with Ukraine, food inflation was already plaguing global consumers. Extreme weather has made it harder to grow crops, while a shortage of workers and higher shipping costs snarled supply chains. The world’s grain inventories are also very tight, so any prolonged disruptions to supplies from Russia or Ukraine has the potential to dislocate markets for years to come.



OLDE FASHIONED CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Chamath Palihapitiya Sued Over Insider Sale of Virgin Galactic Shares


Joel Rosenblatt
Wed, March 2, 2022,


(Bloomberg) -- Chamath Palihapitiya took advantage of his insider role as chairman of Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. to sell 10 million shares of the struggling space travel company for $315 million before he abruptly quit the board last month, a shareholder alleged in a lawsuit.

The complaint, filed on behalf of Virgin Galactic to seek damages from its directors and officers, also alleges that founder Richard Branson pocketed $301 million by dumping his shares while the stock price was “artificially inflated.”

Leaders of the company were well aware of defects in its spacecraft three years before they were publicly disclosed last year, according to the complaint filed in federal court in Brooklyn, New York.

Virgin Galactic has worked to commercialize space flight since 2004, receiving regulatory approval last year to fly customers into space. Its shares have been volatile as it has delayed the start of commercial flights due to an investigation and potentially defective parts.

Palihapitiya, a former Facebook Inc. executive who has raised billions via blank-check firms, earned a reputation as the “SPAC King” for his use of the investment tool to bring companies public. Virgin Galactic began trading in 2019 through a merger with Palihapitiya’s Social Capital Hedosophia.

While Virgin Galactic has promoted the flights of its Eve and Unity spacecraft as successes, they were in fact “rudimentary prototypes” lacking key engineering documentation, with some documentation containing design errors, according to the complaint. Branson and the company have capitalized on periods of good news, according to the lawsuit.

A Social Capital spokesperson declined to comment. Branson and Virgin Galactic didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

The complaint isn’t the first accusing Virgin Galactic executives of misleading investors.

Virgin Galactic has said it remains on track to begin carrying paying customers into space by the fourth quarter of this year. It has has a backlog of about 750 customers who have placed deposits for tickets priced at $450,000 for a 90-minute excursion to space.

(Updates with Social Capital spokesperson declining to comment.)
STATE PIRACY
Estonian cargo ship sinks off Ukrainian Black Sea port in Odessa

By REUTERS 
© (photo credit: REUTERS/STRINGER/FILE PHOTO) 
Russian Navy vessels are anchored in a bay of the Black Sea port of 
Sevastopol in Crimea May 8, 2014

An Estonian-owned cargo ship sank on Thursday off Ukraine's major Black Sea port of Odesa, hours after a Bangladeshi vessel was hit by a missile or bomb at another port, underlining the growing peril to merchant shipping following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Many shipping firms have suspended sailings to affected Black Sea ports and other terminals in Ukraine, with insurance premiums for voyages soaring in recent days. At least three commercial ships have been hit by projectiles since February 24.

Six crew members from the Marshall Islands-flagged and Estonian-owned Helt cargo ship were picked off by the Ukrainian Rescue Services, the Ukraine Maritime Administrator said.

Two crew members were in a life raft at sea while four others were previously unaccounted for, Igor Ilves, managing director of Tallinn-based manager Vista Shipping Agency, told Reuters.

"The vessel has finally sunk," he said. "Two of the crew are in a raft on the water and four others are missing. I don’t know where they are at the moment."

© Provided by The Jerusalem Post Russian Navy's diesel-electric submarine Rostov-on-Don sails in the Bosphorus, on its way to the Black Sea, in Istanbul, Turkey February 13, 2022. 
(credit: REUTERS/YORUK ISIK)

Ilves said the vessel might have struck a mine.

"It’s a big problem - nobody can help them. The Ukrainians cannot go to sea because it is under Russian control."

Ilves said the crew comprised four Ukrainian nationals, one Russian and one Belarusian.

NATO's Shipping Center warned on Wednesday that there was "a high risk of collateral damage on civilian shipping in the northwestern part of the Black Sea," which included mines.

"There are several open-source reports of civilian ships being hit directly or indirectly as a result of the acts of war in the northwestern Black Sea within Ukrainian territorial waters and adjacent international waters," NATO said.

"Civilian shipping is encouraged to exercise caution and be on high alert in the area."

This comes as Ukraine's Armed Forces accused the Russian Black Sea Fleet of using civilian vessels as human shields.

SMERT ASS
Analyst on Russian TV drinks to the 'death' of the stock market in front of stunned host

rcohen@insider.com (Rebecca Cohen)
© Provided by Business Insider 
Alexander Butmanov holds up soda on Russian TV. @tjournal on Twitter

An analyst on Russian TV drank to the death of the stock market, surprising the host.
Russia's stock market has taken a huge hit since the West imposed sanctions on Russia.
"Dear stock market, you were close to us, you were interesting. Rest in peace dear friend," he said.

An analyst on Russian TV drank to the "death" of the country's stock market in front of a shocked host.

Alexander Butmanov, a Russian economist, was asked by the host if exchange strategies today are outdated and if he wishes to stay in his profession.
"As a last resort, I will work as Santa Claus, like I did 25 years ago," he responded.

When the host pushed him on his response, Butmanov grabbed a bottle of soda and said, "Jokes aside, let's get this done quickly."

"I say hello to Sergey Usichenko who drank 12-13 years ago for the death of the stock market. Today I drink soda," he said holding up the bottle.

He concluded: "Dear stock market, you were close to us, you were interesting. Rest in peace dear friend."

The host, clearly stunned, then said "I won't comment on this flash mob because I don't want to believe it…" as her guest took a drink.

Russia's stock market has taken a massive hit and the ruble has hit an all-time low as the West ramps up sanctions against the country and its leader in the wake of a Russian invasion of Ukraine.




BRINGING IT ON HOME
Meet the Russian oligarchs with investment ties to Western Canada not named in Ottawa's sanctions

Meghan Potkins 
© Provided by Financial Post Chelsea Football Club owner Roman Abramovich walks past the High Court in London on Nov. 16, 2011.

NATO governments have pledged to crack down on the dealings of Russian oligarchs and companies, but some controversial figures with significant investment ties to Western Canada have so far evaded sanctions from the Canadian government.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has said all Canadian financial institutions are prohibited from engaging in any transactions with the Russian Central Bank. And Canadian authorities have identified dozens of Russian individuals and entities for sanctions in recent days, freezing the assets of 58 targets and prohibiting all dealings with them.

But one of the most recognizable Russian elites to have been excluded from Canada’s sanction list is billionaire Roman Abramovich, best known outside his home country as the owner of Chelsea FC, one of the world’s most popular soccer teams.

Abramovich, who had come under intense political scrutiny in the U.K., said on March 2 that he will sell Chelsea and donate the proceeds to Ukraine, the Financial Times reported . The team is only his most visible asset in the West. Among other things, Abramovich is the largest shareholder in Evraz PLC, a steel manufacturing and mining business that has facilities in Regina, Calgary and Edmonton.

Evraz has provided the majority of the pipe to the Trans Mountain expansion (TMX) project, which will expand the movement of oil and refined products from the Edmonton area to a terminal on the Pacific Coast for export. Evraz’s agreement with original pipeline owner Kinder Morgan provided 250,000 metric tons of pipe to the project.

Alexander Abramov, Alexander Frolov, Evgeny Shvidler and Maxim Vorobyev — all wealthy Russians — are also among the top six shareholders in the U.K.-based company, according to Bloomberg. None of them appear on Canada’s sanctions list.

TMX was bought by the federal government in 2018, making Evraz’s exclusion from sanctions so far a sensitive issue for Trudeau’s government.

“The steel that was provided by Evraz for the TMX pipeline was fully delivered by the second quarter of 2021 when sanctions were not in place, and the war had not yet begun,” Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said this week at a press conference.

Abramovich isn’t the only billionaire with Canadian holdings to come under media scrutiny following Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

© Thomas Frey/picture alliance via Getty Images files
Oligarch Igor Makarov.

A lesser known figure with investments in Canada’s oilpatch is billionaire Igor Makarov. The Turkmenistan-born businessman and former Russian cyclist owns a 19.5 per cent stake in Spartan Delta Corp, making him the largest shareholder for the Calgary-based natural gas producer.

The company said this week in a statement that Makarov’s stake, through Switzerland-based Areti Energy S.A., does not carry any controls or veto rights. “Spartan does not have any other relationship with Areti beyond its equity ownership in Spartan nor is any such relationship contemplated now or in the future,” the company said.

An American PR firm for Areti vigorously denied to the Financial Post that Makarov has any ties to Putin.

Makarov made his fortune as a natural gas supplier to former Soviet states, eventually expanding into exploration and processing in Russia during the mid ’90s and 2000s as the founder of a company headquartered in Moscow known as Itera — a precursor to Areti, according to the company’s website. Itera was acquired by Russian state-controlled oil company Rosneft in 2013.

Makarov was identified on a U.S. Treasury list of Russian oligarchs in 2018 — a list which critics have lambasted for apparently copying names from a Forbes’ list of world billionaires.

Makarov is not on Canada’s list of Russian oligarchs targeted for sanctions.

The federal government has had sanctions in place since 2014 when Russian forces invaded and annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine — more than 440 individuals and entities have been singled out since then.

Trudeau’s government has hinted that more could be on the way.

“We are looking carefully at the holdings of all Russian oligarchs and Russian companies inside Canada,” Freeland said March 1. “We’re reviewing them, and everything is on the table.”

Freeland added: “If we are truly determined to stand with Ukraine, if the stakes int he fight are as high as I believe them to be, we have to be honest with ourselves, I have to be honest with Canadians, that there could be some collateral damage to Canada.”

— With files from Bloomberg News

• Email: mpotkins@postmedia.com | Twitter: mpotkins
UNETHICAL UCP
Shandro appointment during investigation puts law society in a no-win situation: experts

A group of Alberta law professors say Tyler Shandro should have refused his appointment as justice minister while he is under investigation by the Law Society of Alberta, and Premier Jason Kenney’s cabinet shuffle puts the society in a difficult situation.

© Provided by Edmonton Journal Alberta Health Minister Tyler Shandro answers media questions about the Province's COVID-19 response outside the University of Alberta Hospital, in Edmonton Thursday July 29, 2021. Sandro was taking part in a press conference where the Province announced $1 million to explore a possible stand-alone Stollery Children's Hospital. Photo by David Bloom

Lisa Johnson 
Edmonton Journal 

Writing in the University of Calgary’s Faculty of Law blog this week, legal experts Shaun Fluker, Nigel Bankes and Martin Olszynski said a report prepared by retired Justice Adèle Kent into former justice minister Kaycee Madu leaves important questions unanswered, and the decision to replace Madu with Shandro demonstrates disrespect for the law society’s processes.

The report, released publicly on Friday, came after the law society determined allegations about Shandro’s behaviour while he was health minister warranted a disciplinary hearing, which is yet to be scheduled . Three complaints allege Shandro broke the society’s code of conduct, including that he used his former position as health minister to obtain personal cell phone numbers of health-care workers.

“Premier Kenney should not have put the law society, a statutory body, in this invidious position and, in the circumstances, Minister Shandro should have declined the appointment,” the professors wrote.

In an interview with Postmedia Tuesday, Fluker said sanctions could taint the relationship between the minister and the body in charge of regulating the legal profession in the province, but a decision not to sanction Shandro based on the evidence it hears could create the perception “that the whole process was influenced by the nature of the office.”

“The Law Society is really placed in, one might say, a no-win situation,” said Fluker. The society is an independent body, but does report to the minister, who appoints some public members to its governing board.

Fluker said it would have been reasonable for Sonya Savage, who is Alberta’s energy minister, to continue to serve as interim justice minister while the hearing plays out.

“There’s a lot riding on the perception of the public on the integrity of the law society and the legal profession. It’s hard to overstate what that amounts to,” said Fluker.

Kenney, speaking at an unrelated announcement Wednesday, dismissed the complaints against Shandro as politicized, saying the law society is an independent, self-governing regulatory body whose complaint process is not directed by government.

After a complaint is reviewed by the law society it can be dismissed or referred to a committee or public hearing.

Kenney said the society looks at all complaints, whether they are frivolous or not, pointing to a complaint filed against former NDP justice minister Kathleen Ganley which, unlike the complaints levelled against Shandro, did not warrant a hearing.

“I have every confidence in Minister Shandro, who I think objectively is one of the best qualified ministers of justice in Alberta history,” said Kenney.

NDP justice critic Irfan Sabir said in a Wednesday statement to Postmedia no cabinet ministers were involved in similar hearings during the NDP’s tenure. Sabir added Madu’s attempt to interfere in the administration of justice is a firing offence for any cabinet minister, and neither Madu nor Shandro have been held accountable for their behaviour by the UCP government.

“Public confidence in the rule of law has been damaged even further by the UCP rewarding Madu’s egregious behaviour with another seat in Alberta’s cabinet,” said Sabir.

The Kent report concludes that Madu tried to interfere in the administration of justice with a call to Edmonton’s police chief after receiving a distracted driving ticket in March last year, but he was unsuccessful, and his call created a reasonable perception of an interference with the administration of justice.

The blog post notes that Kenney, when announcing Madu would become minister of labour and immigration, failed to disclose Kent’s most “stinging rebuke,” namely that Madu attempted to interfere in the administration of justice.

“A person reading the premier’s statement could be forgiven for thinking that Ms. Kent had only delivered a mild rebuke to Minister Madu. Nothing could be further from the truth,” it said.

The law professors wrote they found it “extremely concerning” no one in leadership positions initiated an investigation into Madu until reports of the phone call were published by the CBC, and questioned whether Madu should be subject to disciplinary action under the law society’s code of conduct.

“If it’s considered to be behaviour that is inappropriate, and may bring the reputation of the profession into disrepute, then it seems to me that that’s clearly potential grounds for conduct investigation,” said Fluker.

lijohnson@postmedia.com
twitter.com/reportrix
Opinion: Stop hijacking Edmonton's inner-city main streets for commuters

Jamie Czerwinski 



As a third-generation Edmontonian, I’m optimistic about the future of our city. Our municipal leaders talk a great game about their vision to transform Edmonton into a vibrant and sustainable urban metropolis.
© Provided by Edmonton Journal Heavy traffic on 97 Street. File photo.

I recently purchased and renovated my first home near Commonwealth Stadium. I appreciated its proximity to the river valley, Commonwealth Recreation Centre, the Italian Centre Shop, and the LRT. I believed that the city’s promise to become more pedestrian-, cyclist-, and transit-friendly meant that my neighbourhood was on the right track.


That’s why I was excited to learn that the City of Edmonton had opened public consultations on its Boyle Street and McCauley Neighborhood Renewal Plan . But when I dug into the details of the plan, my heart sank.

The plan is irredeemably flawed. It focuses on secondary streets, when the glaringly obvious problem in these neighbourhoods is that, for generations, its main streets have been hijacked for use as “arterial commuter roads,” encouraging tens of thousands of commuters to speed through the hearts of these communities every single day.


The city’s failure to address this fundamental problem is a gross abdication of responsibility. Treating community main streets like “arterial commuter roads” is dangerous, unhealthy, expensive, and unsustainable. It is a slap in the face to the thousands of diverse Edmontonians who call these communities home, and it is completely inconsistent with the city’s professed values and objectives.

It’s inconsistent with the City Plan . It’s inconsistent with Vision Zero . It’s inconsistent with the Main Streets Guideline . It’s inconsistent with the Transportation Master Plan . It’s inconsistent with the Bike Plan . It’s inconsistent with Edmonton’s climate emergency declaration .

It’s inconsistent with the Climate Resilient Edmonton Adaptation Strategy and Action Plan . It’s inconsistent with the Community Energy Transition Strategy . It’s inconsistent with the Boyle Street McCauley Area Redevelopment Plan . It’s inconsistent with the Norwood Boulevard Corridor Study . It’s inconsistent with the Stadium Station Area Redevelopment Plan .

These plans all look great — their graphic design is especially bedazzling — but once again, when the city plans and budgets an actual infrastructure project, it fails to live up to its promise, and instead continues to kick the can down the proverbial road.

It’s almost as if the plan was intentionally designed to avoid the crux of the issue; how else could it be that a conversation about main-street renewal is completely absent from a neighbourhood renewal plan?


Do you know what the worst part is? I bet every single municipal decision-maker — from Mayor Amarjeet Sohi on down — knows that this is wrong, but they would rather silently condemn underprivileged inner-city residents to yet another generation of heavy traffic and broken communities than take responsibility and persuade commuters to change their habits.

How would you feel if tens of thousands of commuters were speeding through your neighbourhood on a daily basis?

If the city really wants to continue to misappropriate these community main streets as “arterial commuter roads,” then it should publicly scrap its much-ballyhooed visions of a better city and loudly and proudly declare itself the sprawling suburban wasteland it evidently aspires to be.

It should expropriate and bulldoze adjacent properties to maintain adequate clearances from these urban highways. And it should designate them as toll roads and direct their revenue to the neighbourhoods negatively impacted by the traffic and community disruption they cause.

Oh, what’s that? You don’t think those are good ideas? No, neither do I.

Instead, these main streets should be returned to the communities they were originally designed to serve. They should be vibrant, green, healthy, and safe places for residents to live, work, and play. To accomplish this, they must be freed of the oppressive burden of high-speed commuter traffic that we have collectively forced upon them for generations.


The city should immediately halt all neighbourhood renewal operations and revise their plans to ensure that main-street renewal becomes the primary focus of every neighbourhood renewal project. Anything less is completely unacceptable.

The future of our city depends on it.

Jamie Czerwinski is a data scientist and former graduate student leader at Athabasca University. He lives in Parkdale, is an avid bicycle commuter, and is a lifelong resident of the Edmonton area.
GOOD
ICANN rejects Ukraine's request to cut off Russia from the global internet


The international non-profit that coordinates management of the internet told Ukraine it will not intervene in the country's war with Russia, rebuffing a request to cut Russia off from the global internet.

© Anton Novoderezhkin/TASS/Getty Images 
A woman takes pictures during a snowfall, on January 5, 2022, the Annette cyclone will bring 20% of the average monthly amount of precipitation.

By Brian Fung, CNN Business 

Ukraine's proposal is neither technically feasible nor within the mission of ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, according to a letter ICANN sent to Ukrainian officials on Wednesday.

"As you know, the Internet is a decentralized system. No one actor has the ability to control it or shut it down," ICANN CEO Göran Marby wrote in the the letter.

Marby expressed his personal concern about Ukrainians' well-being as well as the "terrible toll being exacted on your country." But, he wrote, "our mission does not extend to taking punitive actions, issuing sanctions, or restricting access against segments of the Internet -- regardless of the provocations."

"Essentially," he added, "ICANN has been built to ensure that the Internet works, not for its coordination role to be used to stop it from working."

Internet governance experts previously told CNN that ICANN was expected to reject Ukraine's plea, and that Ukraine's proposal, if implemented, could have devastating consequences for average Russian internet users, including dissidents.

The original request, sent on Monday from Ukraine's representative on ICANN's Governmental Advisory Committee, called for the Russian internet country code .RU and its Cyrillic equivalents to be revoked. The representative, Andrii Nabok, also said he was sending a separate request to Europe and Central Asia's regional internet registry, asking it to take back all of the IP addresses it had assigned to Russia.

Nabok argued that the measures would be another way for the world to sanction Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, and that it would help internet users access "reliable information in alternative domain zones, preventing propaganda and disinformation."

Taking back Russian IP addresses could effectively have caused Russian websites to disappear from the internet because they have no assigned place to sit, Mallory Knodel, chief technology officer at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a US-based think tank, previously told CNN.

It would also mean that smartphones, computers and other connected devices in Russia would be unable to access the wider internet because they would no longer have assigned IP addresses that could identify those devices to a global network, Knodel said.

RUSSIA ALREADY RESTRICTS THE INTERNET FROM IT'S CITIZENS 
OneWeb Stops All Internet Satellite Launches From Russia's Space Complex

The next batch of OneWeb broadband satellites won't be lifting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan this week, as tensions remain high between Russia and Western countries over Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Their launch had been scheduled for Saturday.
© Provided by CNET A Soyuz rocket prepares to launch OneWeb satellites from Kazakhstan in 2020. OneWeb

Eric Mack 
CNET

The company issued a 12-word statement from London early Thursday: "The Board of OneWeb has voted to suspend all launches from Baikonur."

That was in response to an ultimatum from the head of Russia's space agency, who continues to lash out against the West's condemnation of the war in Ukraine by making threats and erecting roadblocks between Earth and orbit.

Roscosmos director Dmitry Rogozin said Wednesday that the agency would not carry out any more OneWeb missions with its Russian Soyuz spacecraft unless the UK sells its share in the company and OneWeb guarantees its constellation will not be used for military purposes.

The UK government teamed up with Indian telecom giant Bharti Global to acquire the financially troubled OneWeb in 2020. Despite some false starts in its history, the company aims to offer competition for Elon Musk's Starlink.

Rogozin's threat came after Musk announced that Starlink has been activated in Ukraine and that SpaceX has begun shipping new receivers into the war-torn nation.

"We have serious doubts about how OneWeb will behave in such a situation when the [UK] government is the controlling shareholder," Rogozin said on Russian TV, according to state news outlet Tass.

The UK government is actually not the largest shareholder. Bharti holds twice as much equity in the company, and Eutelsat and Softbank are also significant shareholders.

UK Business and Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng made clear on Twitter Wednesday that the country will be holding onto its stake.

"There's no negotiation on OneWeb: the UK Government is not selling its share," Kwarteng wrote. "We are in touch with other shareholders to discuss next steps..."

Bharti didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which began last Thursday, and the reaction to it has been playing havoc with space operations around the world. The ExoMars mission, developed in partnership between the European Space Agency and Roscosmos, is now no longer expected to launch this year due to the fallout over European sanctions against Russia.

Russia has also halted all Soyuz launches from Europe's spaceport in French Guiana and stopped shipping rocket engines to the US.

Last week, Rogozin seemed to threaten to drop the International Space Station on the US or Europe in response to initial talk of US sanctions. True to form, Musk stepped up on Twitter to volunteer SpaceX spacecraft to take over the job of steering the ISS that's now done with the help of Russian engines.

Meanwhile, three Russian cosmonauts are set to launch to the ISS this month shortly before two different cosmonauts and one NASA astronaut return to Earth in a Soyuz capsule.