| 
						Trading houses caught in crossfire of Russian oil 
						contamination
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [May 08, 2019]   
		By Olga Yagova and Dmitry Zhdannikov 
 MOSCOW/LONDON (Reuters) - Trading houses 
		Vitol, Glencore and Trafigura are caught in the crossfire between 
		Russian oil producers and Western buyers as the latter refuse to take 
		contaminated crude that traders bought from companies in Russia.
 
 At least 10 crude tankers with 1 million tonnes of oil, worth more than 
		$500 million in normal circumstances, are marooned across Europe and 
		still looking for buyers because they have been contaminated with 
		organic chloride.
 
 The three trading firms bought the cargoes in the Russian Baltic port of 
		Ust-Luga from Russian producers such as Rosneft and Surgut, as well as 
		Kazakh firms.
 
		
		 
		
 But buyers including Neste, Eni, Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell, PKN and 
		Repsol have refused to take the oil into their refining systems, 
		according to at least a dozen traders and Refinitiv shiptracking data. 
		The trading houses declined to comment.
 
 "This is a disaster and a huge blow to Russia's image as a reliable 
		supplier. We hear promises from the Russian government that the problem 
		will be fixed but it still hasn't been fixed," said a buyer of Russian 
		crude, who asked not to be identified because his employer forbids him 
		from speaking to the media.
 
 The contamination was discovered at the end of April, forcing Russia to 
		shut the Druzhba pipeline. The line pumps 1 million barrels per day 
		(bpd) of crude - 1 percent of global supply. Druzhba serves Germany, 
		Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Ukraine and Belarus.
 
 Oil from Ust-Luga, which ships 500,000 bpd to global markets, or 22 
		large tankers a month, has also been contaminated with organic chloride. 
		The chemical compound is used for oil extraction but can damage refining 
		equipment.
 
 The Russian supply problems contributed to an oil price spike to 
		six-month highs and led to a drop in production from the world's 
		second-largest exporter of crude.
 
 A long outage could force refineries in Europe to cut operations steeply 
		while triggering claims by Western buyers against Russian producers, who 
		could in turn file claims against Russian pipeline monopoly Transneft 
		for lost profit.
 
 A build-up of unsold cargoes from Ust-Luga could create a supply 
		shortage in Europe and further dent the financial results of trading 
		houses, which had a difficult year in 2018 due to a tough business 
		environment.
 
 The Russian government promised to fix the quality problem at Ust-Luga 
		by May 6-8 but five Russian oil buyers said on Wednesday the levels of 
		organic chloride remained too high. At 60-75 parts per million (ppm), 
		they were six times above normal levels, down from 10-15 times above the 
		norm previously.
 
 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			Oil is pumped into an oil tanker at the Ust-Luga oil products 
			terminal in the settlement of Ust-luga, April 9, 2014. 
			REUTERS/Alexander Demianchuk 
            
			 
"I asked my refining manager at what discount he would take such a cargo," a 
trader with a Western major that declined a cargo from Ust-Luga said.
 "Can we make a profit if we buy it at a huge discount? My refining manager told 
me - don't touch it. Why bother? The risks to refining equipment are just too 
big."
 
 FEARS GROW
 
 Crude contamination is not rare and has happened in recent years in the United 
States, Mexico and the Middle East. But the scale of Russia's problem is 
unusually large.
 
 For Ust-Luga cargoes, fixing the problem is not impossible. But it won't be 
easy.
 
 Contaminated crude needs to be blended with clean oil to reach necessary 
standards, but this requires time and significant storage space. It's also 
costly.
 
 Terminals in Europe's biggest storage area, Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp, have 
told customers they will not accept any crude with organic chloride above 50 ppm, 
three trading sources said.
 
 Neither the Russian government nor Transneft would say whether Russian oil 
producers might receive compensation, which in turn could be provided to Western 
buyers.
 
 No help towards diluting contaminated oil has been offered by Moscow or 
Transneft.
 
 
 On Wednesday, a spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin, Dmitry Peskov, 
declined to answer a question on whether Transneft should compensate Russian 
producers.
 
 Russian officials have said contaminated oil from the Druzhba pipeline could be 
taken by rail towards the Black Sea port of Novorossiisk, where Transneft has 
large storage tanks.
 
 "We are now performing mandatory quality checks from every single Russia port to 
avoid a repeat of the Ust-Luga disaster," a second trader with a Western major 
said.
 
 (Additional reporting by Gleb Gorodyankin and Ahmad Ghaddar; Writing by Dmitry 
Zhdannikov; Editing by Dale Hudson)
 
				 
			[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |