China's 'teapot' refiners mop up swelling Iranian crude, defying U.S.
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[September 14, 2023] By
Muyu Xu
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Appetite for Iranian crude is growing in China,
the world's biggest oil importer, after the extension of supply cuts by
Saudi Arabia and Russia boosted global prices, while Tehran is stepping
up output and exports despite U.S. sanctions.
Although China's "teapots", or small independent refiners, are stocking
up on Iran's discounted oil as they exploit robust margins to fill
strong seasonal demand, big state refiners are still keeping away.
Iran's crude exports of about 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) stand at
their highest in more than four years, with more than 80% shipped to
China, data from consultancies FGE and Vortexa shows.
The export surge comes at a time when Washington and Tehran are working
on prisoner swaps and ways to free up Iranian funds frozen overseas,
leading some traders to speculate a softening of U.S. sanctions on
Iranian crude could be in the offing.
"I think Iranians have been given unwritten confirmation ... that there
won't be any further sanctions on the crude buyers as long as they are
engaged in the unofficial negotiations," said Iman Nasseri, managing
director of FGE.
He added that China's imports of Iranian crude could rise another
200,000 bpd to 300,000 bpd, from 1.2 million bpd to 1.3 million bpd now,
if prices stay low, although volumes could be capped by buyers' risk
appetite and payment constraints.
The U.S. continues to enforce the sanctions on Iran's oil and
petrochemical industries, a senior State Department official told
Reuters, adding that Iran's sanctions evasion was costly.
"We assess that the regime receives only a fraction of the market price
for the oil it is able to sell."
Chinese state-owned enterprises had not resumed import and refining of
Iranian oil because U.S. sanctions, and the threat of secondary
sanctions, remain a deterrent, the official added.
Beijing has long said it opposes Washington's "long-arm" jurisdiction,
and has urged that sanctions on Iran be dropped.
Iran is exporting about 2 million bpd of crude oil as well as condensate
and products, as Tehran has boosted production to nearly 3.6 million
bpd, say people familiar with the matter, or near its maximum of about 4
million bpd.
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Oil tankers are seen in Shandong Haike Group in Dongying, Shandong
province, China January 11, 2017. Picture taken January 11, 2017.
REUTERS/Aizhu Chen
Official Chinese data rarely reflects any Iranian oil imports, which
are typically registered instead as shipments from Malaysia, Oman or
other Middle Eastern countries.
"Washington is turning a blind eye to Iranian oil on the water,"
said a trader who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Analysts have said Iran's limited steps to slow its build-up of
near-weapons-grade uranium may help ease tension with the United
States, but there is no significant progress towards a wider nuclear
deal before the 2024 U.S. elections.
TEAPOTS AND SANCTIONS
In China, traders and analysts say, Iranian oil is bought only by
small-scale independent refineries, known as teapots, concentrated
in the coastal province of Shandong.
State-owned refiners and major private refiners have avoided the
trade since the U.S. re-imposed sanctions in 2019, they said.
Lured by steep discounts, the dozens of domestically-focused
refiners source much of their feedstock from countries under Western
sanctions, such as Iran, Russia and Venezuela, going through
middlemen, trade sources said.
A handful of teapots that rely on Western technology or have deals
with other suppliers avoid Iranian oil, however.
The cost-sensitive teapots are turning to Iran as Russian crude gets
expensive, a trading source in Shandong said.
Russia's light sweet ESPO last traded in early September at a
premium of about 50 cents a barrel to ICE Brent, while medium sour
Urals crude was offered at a discount of about $1.50 to ICE Brent,
traders said.
In contrast, Iranian Light and Iranian Heavy grades traded at wide
discounts of about $13 a barrel and near $20, respectively, on a
delivery ex-ship basis, they added.
(Reporting by Muyu Xu; Additional reporting by Timothy Gardner in
Washington; Editing by Florence Tan and Clarence Fernandez)
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