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Cryptocurrency News Articles

Russian Oil Companies Are Using Tether to Convert Chinese Yuan and Indian Rupees to Russian Roubles

Mar 16, 2025 at 07:10 pm

This bypasses Western sanctions and establishes a more independent way to conduct cross-border transactions.

Russian Oil Companies Are Using Tether to Convert Chinese Yuan and Indian Rupees to Russian Roubles

Russian oil companies are using Tether to convert Chinese yuan and Indian rupees into Russian roubles, helping to smooth the transaction process and avoid Western sanctions.

The changes began to take effect after the legal framework was amended in August, allowing mining companies to transact with cryptocurrency. This was done to circumvent trade disruptions caused by US and EU sanctions and the US war in Ukraine.

A Chinese buyer, for example, pays a banker offshore in exchange for Russian oil. The banker then converts the money into crypto and sends it to Russia, where it is finally converted into roubles. An anonymous source for Reuters claims that transactions like this occur every month for tens of millions in dollars. The source claims to be familiar with the process and has seen it take place.

However, fiat currency remains the main medium for Russian oil trade despite numerous sanctions from Western countries. Russia has also been using multiple methods to sidestep sanctions, which includes using other currencies, such as the United Arab Emirates dirham, to make large-scale cross-border payments.

China, meanwhile, has remained cautious of cryptocurrencies despite Russia using stablecoins for cross-border payments. The Asian powerhouse essentially banned digital assets from the mainland in 2021. However, Hong Kong has embraced the new technology and has even become a global hub for digital asset innovation.

Russia has been engaging more with crypto. This week, it created an Experimental Legal Regime (ELR), permitting a limited group of wealthy investors to trade cryptocurrencies for three years.

Crypto-based cross-border payments in Russia only constitute a small fraction of the $192 billion oil trade; however, this use case shows how crypto can be put to practical use in circumventing large-scale sanctions. Other countries like Iran and Venezuela have also used similar strategies to avoid external sanctions. Bitcoin, and cryptocurrency in general, was designed from the start to resist censorship, and thus proved to be quite an effective technology in facilitating payments.

The Ukraine conflict was a catalyst for this change in global payment processes, as it highlighted a lack of consistency regarding sanctions and provided a new use case for the digital assets market. America will most likely monitor these blockchain transactions to see whether they continue to challenge traditional forms of finance and hegemony.

Russia may emerge from this conflict as a major contributor to digital asset technology, which will inspire other nations to use similar means and help to regain economic stability in uncertain times.

Regulatory barriers continue to block cryptocurrency despite a strong case for Blockchain technology and a noticeable weakness regarding traditional reserves as a method to enable cross-border trade in a safe, reliable, and timely manner.

Russia has made efforts to adopt the BRICS payment system and has attempted to adopt the currencies of trading partners, but alas, it has continued to fall back on using dollars, euros, and the SWIFT standard for transactions. Trading partners, like China, are therefore exposed to the secondary effects of Western sanctions, which in turn limits trade opportunities for the two countries.

In August, Russia expanded its mining regulation, requiring industrial miners to register with a government database, comply with consumption restrictions, and report ongoing operations. The regulation also included the use of Russian-mined cryptocurrency to facilitate foreign transactions, cross-border operations, and international settlements.

One of BRICS’ strategies is for member states to build sovereign technological infrastructure so that they are less reliant on Western technology. BRICS stipulates that members should retain technology control to limit Western hegemony from dominating supply chains. Russia has started engaging more with sovereign technologies, such as Sberbank launching a digital assets project in 2022, which forms part of a larger trade and global independence project.

In December, a Russian lawmaker suggested that Bitcoin, due to its decentralized design, should be used to reduce reliance on western international finance systems. He further indicated that a Bitcoin reserve should be created, despite the ongoing criticism of such a reserve. The recent mining legislation, which included a section on cryptocurrency, may be a vital step for Russia to adopt digital asset technology, and it may continue to develop in the coming months and years. After all, Bitcoin may be a useful transition technology, from the preferred American standards, to a new and developing BRICS way of handling transactions.

The case for Bitcoin as a Russian reserve currency seemed good in December, as the digital asset continued to see market highs being hit as it trades above $100,000. Many see the asset as a tool to provide an extra layer of economic resilience during uncertain times and under the constant threat of global sanctions. Russia may continue to invest more in digital asset technology, and more so as Bitcoin adoption rises in popularity.

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Other articles published on Mar 18, 2025