(Adds comment from Japan, New Zealand) The International Energy...

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    (Adds comment from Japan, New Zealand)

    The International Energy Agency (IEA) on Thursday listed members' contributions to a 120-million-barrel release of crude and oil products from emergency stockpiles aimed at cooling global oil prices following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

    The release of stocks by the U.S.-allied members of the IEA, which is made up of 31 mostly industrialized countries but not Russia, would be their second coordinated release in a month and would be the fifth in the agency's history to confront oil market disruption.

    It is the largest release from non-U.S. IEA countries on top of the biggest release by the United States.

    Global oil prices LCOc1 CLc1 are headed for their second weekly drop with Brent falling about $10 to below $100 a barrel since the United States announced its largest ever oil reserve release in late March.

    Prices hit 14-year highs last month as Western sanctions on Russia disrupted crude and oil product exports from the world's number two crude exporter.

    The commitments made by members reached 120 million barrels to be released over a six-month period, the IEA said.

    In addition to a 60 million barrels release from the United States, Japan, the second biggest contributor, said it would release a record 15 million barrels.

    Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida told reporters late on Thursday Russia's invasion of Ukraine was "unforgivable" and the release would help curb oil prices.

    "We must not forgive its invasion and war crimes. We will demonstrate our will with severe action," he said.

    Russia says its forces are conducting a "special operation" in Ukraine.

    Japan held about 470 million barrels of petroleum reserves at the end of January, equivalent to 236 days of domestic consumption, in state reserves, reserves held by refiners and a joint crude oil storage scheme with producing countries.

    New Zealand said it would contribute crude and diesel to the IEA release.

    "Our release is made up of around 184,000 barrels of crude oil held in Spain and close to 299,000 barrels of diesel held in the United Kingdom," New Zealand's minister of energy and resources, Megan Woods, said in a statement.

    "There has been a great deal of volatility in global oil markets since the invasion and this further action, coupled with the United States’ move to release 180 million barrels of oil over the next six months, will help to provide some certainty to the market," she said.

    Other major contributors include South Korea, Germany, France, Italy and Britain.

    	 Country		   Thousand barrels  
    								
    								
      United States			  60559 
    
    	  Japan				  15000 
       South Korea			   7230 
    
    	 Germany				 6480 
    	  France				 6047 
    	  Italy				  5000 
      United Kingdom			 4408 
    
    	  Spain				  4000 
    	  Turkey				 3060 
    	  Poland				 2298 
    	Australia				1608 
       Netherlands			   1600 
    
    	  Greece				  624 
    	 Hungary				  531 
       New Zealand				483 
    
    	 Ireland				  451 
    	 Finland				  369 
    	Lithuania				 180 
    	 Estonia				  74                        
 
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