China quietly increases purchases of low-priced Russian oil
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[May 20, 2022] By
Chen Aizhu and Florence Tan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China is quietly
ramping up purchases of oil from Russia at bargain prices, according to
shipping data and oil traders who spoke to Reuters, filling the vacuum
left by Western buyers backing away from business with Russia after its
invasion of Ukraine in February.
The move by the world's biggest oil importer comes a month after it
initially cut back on Russian supplies, for fear of appearing to openly
support Moscow and potentially expose its state oil giants to sanctions.
China's seaborne Russian oil imports will jump to a near-record 1.1
million barrels per day (bpd) in May, up from 750,000 bpd in the first
quarter and 800,000 bpd in 2021, according to an estimate by Vortexa
Analytics.
Unipec, the trading arm of Asia's top refiner Sinopec Corp, is leading
the purchases, along with Zhenhua Oil, a unit of China's defense
conglomerate Norinco, according to shipping data, a shipbroker report
seen by Reuters and five traders. Livna Shipping Ltd, a Hong
Kong-registered firm, has also recently emerged as a major shipper of
Russian oil into China, the traders said.
Sinopec declined comment. Zhenhua and Livna did not respond to requests
for comment.
The firms are filling the hole left by western buyers after Russia's
invasion of Ukraine, which Russia calls a "special military operation."
The United States, Britain and some other key oil buyers banned imports
of Russian oil shortly after the invasion. The European Union is
finalizing a further round of sanctions, including a ban on Russian oil
purchases. Many European refiners have already stopped buying from
Russia for fear of running afoul of sanctions or drawing negative
publicity.
Vitol and Trafigura, two of the world's biggest commodity traders,
phased out purchases from Rosneft, Russia's biggest oil producer, ahead
of an EU rule that came into effect on May 15 barring purchases unless
"strictly necessary" to secure the EU's energy needs.
"The situation began taking a drastic turn after the exit of Vitol and
Trafigura that created a vacuum, which could only be filled by companies
that can provide value and are trusted by their Russian counterparts,"
one Chinese trader, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.
The low price of Russia's oil – spot differentials are about $29 less
per barrel compared with before the invasion, according to traders - is
a boon for China's refiners as they face shrinking margins in a slowing
economy. The price is well below competing barrels from the Middle East,
Africa, Europe and the United States.
China separately receives some 800,000 bpd of Russian oil via pipelines
under government deals. That would bring May imports to nearly 2 million
bpd, 15% of China's overall demand. For Russia, oil sales are helping to
cushion the blow to its economy from sanctions.
STATE BUYERS
State-owned Chinese companies, led by Sinopec and Zhenhua, are set to
buy two thirds of Russia's flagship Far Eastern export grade ESPO
(Eastern Siberia–Pacific Ocean oil pipeline) blend in May, up from a
third before the invasion of Ukraine, traders who closely monitor the
flows told Reuters. Russia exported about 24 million barrels in May, 6%
higher than April.
Sinopec alone is likely to buy at least 10 ESPO shipments in May,
doubling its volume before the invasion, with some of the trades hitting
a record discount of $20 a barrel below benchmark Dubai crude on FOB
Kozmino basis, three of the traders said.
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Oil tankers are seen at a terminal of Sinopec Yaogang oil depot in
Nantong, Jiangsu province, China June 11, 2019.
REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo/File Photo
Sinopec, Zhenhua and Livna are moving more oil from both Russia's Baltic
Sea ports in northwestern Europe and its Far East export hub Kozmino.
Zhenhua, the smallest state-owned Chinese oil trader, has chartered
ships to move Russian oil, according to shipping data and traders with
knowledge of the matter. North Petroleum International Co, a unit of
Zhenhua, loaded two ESPO shipments in early May, and another two cargoes
of Urals from Baltic Sea port Ust-Luga in late April and mid-May,
according to data from Refinitiv and Vortexa, a shipbroker report and
traders.
Norinco, one of the world's largest defence contractors, branched into
oil more than two decades ago, winning a concession to produce oil in
Iraq in the 1990s. Its trading vehicle Zhenhua recently expanded into
gas terminal investment and trading.
Zhenhua has bought some of its supply of Russian oil via Switzerland-based
Paramount Energy, a trader specializing in marketing oil from independent
Russian and Kazakhstan producers to mostly private end-users, said two traders
with knowledge of the matter.
A regular marketer of ESPO to China's independent refiners since 2016, Paramount
Energy expanded its China business by boosting sales to Zhenhua after it set up
a Beijing office in 2020, said the trading executives.
In response to Reuters' questions, Paramount Energy did not address trades made
after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. It said it "has customers in China for ESPO
crude cargoes delivered under long-term contracts established well before Feb.
24," the date of the invasion. "This crude is supplied exclusively by
independent oil producers and non-state companies, as has long been our policy."
Livna, which has not previously been a major player in taking Russian oil to
Asia, has since late April loaded over 7 million barrels of Russian Urals and
ESPO crude bound for China, according to ship-tracking data from Vortexa and
Refinitiv.
Previously a regular shipper of Russia's Europe-focused export-grade Urals
within Europe, Livna started sending Russian oil to Shandong province, China's
independent refiners' hub, in early 2020, according to shipping data.
So far in May, Livna has loaded eight cargoes, or nearly 6 million barrels of
ESPO oil, destined for China, up from one or two cargoes each month earlier in
this year, shipping data showed. Livna also loaded at least two Urals shipments
from Baltic ports in May for delivery to China, traders told Reuters.
The withdrawal of western traders has also attracted new player Shandong Port
International Trade Group, a provincial government-backed trader to the
business, traders told Reuters.
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu and Florence Tan in Singapore and Reuters reporters;
Editing by Bill Rigby)
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