After OPEC cuts heavy
oil, China teapot refiners pull U.S. supply to Asia
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[February 20, 2017]
By Florence Tan and Liz Hampton
SINGAPORE/HOUSTON
(Reuters) - Chinese independent, or teapot, refiners are bringing in
rare cargoes of North American heavy crude in a new long-distance flow
that traders say has only been made possible by OPEC's output cuts and
ample supplies in Canada and the United States.
In April, at least 1 million barrels of the heavy crude Mars, pumped
from the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, are expected to land in China's Shandong
province and 1 million barrels of a second unidentified heavy grade will
arrive in China, trade and shipping sources said last week. This follows
the arrival in January of 600,000 barrels of U.S. Gulf Blend, a heavy
crude made up of a blend of various U.S. and Canadian grades loaded onto
ships on the U.S. Gulf Coast, according to the sources and shipping
data.
Heavy crude is typically more dense and viscous than other oil grades.
Refiners with facilities that can process these grades value heavy crude
because its lower cost results in higher margins from producing fuels
from these grades.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' (OPEC) output
cuts have targeted heavy crude, with linchpin producer Saudi Arabia and
Venezuela reducing their exports of heavy crude. That has increased the
price of Middle East heavy crudes for Asian delivery, making it
economical for traders to ship crude from Russia, the Atlantic Basin and
the United States to Asia.
"The OPEC cuts started from medium and heavy grades and Venezuela (a key
supplier to China) is exporting less," said a Singapore-based crude oil
trader.
The tightening heavy crude supplies are occurring at a time when demand
for these types has increased after refiners upgraded their plants, the
trader said. Heavy crude typically yields a higher percentage of residue
fuels when first processed at a refinery and that residue is then
reformulated into higher-value fuels such as gasoline and diesel fuel in
so-called cracking units.
Since late last year, China, the world's second-largest oil consumer,
has stepped up imports from North America, one of the few regions where
oil production is growing.
Asia's strong pull for heavy sour crude from the Americas led Mars to
hit its highest level in a year relative to North American price
benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) as traders forecast increased
export demand from Asia.
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Crude oil storage tanks are seen from above at the Cushing oil hub,
in Cushing, Oklahoma, March 24, 2016. REUTERS/Nick Oxford/File Photo
The
Ligurian Sea, a Suezmax tanker, loaded 600,000 barrels of U.S. Gulf Coast Blend
from Port Arthur in Texas. The tanker then went around South Africa to arrive at
Lanshan port in Shandong in early January after a 55-day journey, shipping data
on Thomson Reuters Eikon showed.
The cargo contained Canadian Access Western Blend, a heavy sour grade with an
API gravity of about 22 degrees and nearly 4 percent sulfur, said two trade
sources who track oil flows.
Chinese agent Sinoenergy sold the bulk of the cargo to Shandong Tianhong
Chemical and the rest went to Shandong Haiyou Petrochemical Group, they said.
The
Mars cargo may go to Chinese independent refiner Shandong Wonfull Petrochemical
Group, who are close to buying the heavy-sour grade for the first time for April
delivery, said a source with knowledge of the proposed deal. The source declined
to be named due to company policy.
Wonfull will likely buy the cargo from Swiss trader Trafigura [TRAFG.UL], an
active seller of U.S. crude in Asia, said a second trader who closely tracks oil
deals in Shangdong.
Castleton Commodities International (CCI) also plans to ship 1 million barrels
of an unknown heavy crude grade from the United States to China onboard the
Suezmax tanker Erviken which is scheduled to load on Feb. 20, according to one
trader, a source in the shipping industry and shipping data.
Sinoenergy, Trafigura, Wonfull, CCI and Haiyou declined to comment. Tianhong
could not be reached for comment.
China's largest refiner Sinopec imported heavy crude from the U.S. Gulf late
last year, a source with knowledge of the matter said, confirming an earlier
Reuters story.
(Reporting by Liz Hampton in HOUSTON, Catherine Ngai in NEW YORK, Florence Tan
and Mark Tay in SINGAPORE; Additional reporting by Jane Chung in SEOUL and Osamu
Tsukimori in TOKYO)
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