Analysis: Iran slips record volume of oil into China,
reaches out to Asian clients for trade resumption
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[March 08, 2021] By
Nidhi Verma and Shu Zhang
(Reuters) - Iran has quietly moved record
amounts of crude oil to top client China in recent months, while India's
state refiners have added Iranian oil to their annual import plans on
the assumption that U.S. sanctions on the OPEC supplier will soon ease,
according to six industry sources and Refinitiv data.
U.S. President Joe Biden has sought to revive talks with Iran on a
nuclear deal abandoned by former President Donald Trump in 2018,
although harsh economic measures remain in place that Tehran insists be
lifted before negotiations resume.
The National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) has started reaching out to
customers across Asia since Biden took office to assess potential demand
for its crude, said the sources, who declined to be named because of the
sensitivity of the matter.
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The sanctions caused a precipitous drop in Iranian exports to China,
India, Japan and South Korea since late 2018. Those measures, and output
cuts by fellow OPEC+ producers, have led to tight supplies of Middle
East sour crude in Asia, the top global oil market. Asia imports more
than half of its crude from the Middle East.
"They talked to us. They said: 'very soon they hope to resume oil
supplies.' We said: 'Inshallah'," said one source at an Indian refiner.
"Inshallah" is an Arabic term that means "God willing," used to express
that the speaker hopes something will happen.
GRAPHIC: China's Iranian oil purchases hit record in early 2021 -
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gfx/ce/yzdvxwmdapx/China's%20Iranian%20oil%20purchases.jpg
Restored Iranian supplies to India, the world's third-largest crude
importer, could reduce demand for spot cargoes, which has climbed
recently after Iraq cut supplies and Kuwait reduced the duration of some
contracts.
India, which is hurting from the recent sustained recovery in global
crude prices, expects Iranian supplies to return to the market in 3 to 4
months, a government official said.
Another Indian refiner said they had been told by NIOC officials that a
formal agreement on crude supply would be signed after Iran's elections
in June. NIOC has also reached out to other Asian customers.
"Recently NIOC called us, asking about demand," said a trader at an east
Asian refiner. "It looks like Iran is getting ready to return to the
market."
Another refining source said the talks were "very initial" and that NIOC
wanted to know whether the company would resume Iranian oil purchases.
The sources declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the
matter.
CHINA
Unlike India, China never completely halted Iranian oil imports.
Iran moved about 17.8 million tonnes (306,000 barrels per day) of crude
into China during the past 14 months, with volumes reaching record
levels in January and February, according to Refinitiv Oil Research.
GRAPHIC: China's indirect Iranian oil imports by ports -
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%20Iran%20oil%20purchases%20by%20ports.jpg
Of these, about 75% were "indirect" imports identified as oil from Oman,
the United Arab Emirates or Malaysia, which entered China mainly via
ports in eastern Shandong province, home to most of China's independent
refiners, or Yingkou port in northeastern Liaoning province.
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A general view of Abadan oil refinery in southwest Iran, is pictured
from Iraqi side of Shatt al-Arab in Al-Faw south of Basra, Iraq
September 21, 2019. REUTERS/Essam Al-Sudani/File Photo
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The remaining 25% of imports were marked as official purchases for China's
Strategic Petroleum Reserves, Refinitiv said, as Beijing maintains a small
purchase volume despite U.S. sanctions.
GRAPHIC: Oman, Malaysia UAE crude flows to China -
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OmanMalaysiaUAEcrudetoChina.jpg
"Volumes started to surge from the last quarter of 2020, with Shandong province
as the top receiving region which indicates independent plants are the main
consumers," said Emma Li, a Refinitiv crude flows analyst.
Tankers carrying Iranian oil typically switch off their transponders when
loading to avoid detection, but then become traceable via satellites near ports
in Oman, the UAE and Iraq. Some transfer part of their cargoes to other ships
near Singapore or Malaysia before sailing to China, Li said.
Reuters is unable to identify the end buyers for these cargoes.
Without commenting directly on the oil transactions, the Spokesman's Office of
China's Foreign Ministry said: "Iran is a friendly nation to China and the two
nations have maintained normal exchanges and cooperation. The cooperation
between China and Iran under the framework of international laws is both
reasonable and legitimate, and deserves respect and protection."
NIOC declined to comment. An official at the country's Oil Ministry said, ”When
the unjust U.S. sanctions are lifted, Iran will be able to sell its oil to any
country, and I can assure you that many contracts will be signed.”
Geneva-based tanker tracker Petro-Logistics said Iranian oil loadings in January
exceeded 600,000 bpd for the first time since May 2019, a sign that the end of
Donald Trump's term may be changing buyer behavior.
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Indirect shipment arrivals in February, including those waiting to discharge off
Chinese ports, reached nearly 850,000 bpd, beating the daily record of 790,000
bpd set in April 2019, according to Refinitiv and Chinese customs data.
Chinese customs data showed on Sunday that crude imports rose 4% annually in the
first two months of this year. It will release details for the breakdown by
country of origin this month.
"Iranian stuff started to slip into Shandong from late 2019... started with some
cash-stripped refiners which processed oil first before paying for the cargo,"
said an independent Chinese trader familiar with some of the transactions.
Most of these transactions were settled in Chinese currency or euros to
circumvent U.S. scrutiny, the trader said.
The record imports have weighed on prices for competing medium and heavy grades
from other Middle East producers, traders said.
"While it does not seem that the sanction will be lifted anytime soon, Iran has
resurfaced," another trade source said.
(Reporting by Nidhi Verma in New Delhi, Shu Zhang and Florence Tan in Singapore;
additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Dubai; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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