Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Europe sends oil as far as Cuba and Australia as glut grows

Europe sends oil as far as Cuba and Australia as glut grows
By Amanda Cooper and Olga Yagova | LONDON/MOSCOW

The Mediterranean is rapidly becoming the world's most oversupplied oil
market, as exports from OPEC heavyweights Iraq and Iran, rising star
Kazakhstan and the return of Libyan crude force traders to get creative
in marketing their barrels.

Supply of virtually every key grade of crude in the region has increased
in the last year, in spite of the benchmark oil price struggling to hold
above $45 a barrel and showing a year-on-year loss of over 10 percent.

Low freight rates and fierce competition for buyers have unleashed
unusual trade flows of Mediterranean crude and prompted some producers
to get creative with blending to expand their client base.

Looking at combined exports of major grades from OPEC members Iran,
Algeria and Libya, together with those from non-OPEC producers Russia
and Kazakhstan, shipments of crude towards the Mediterranean have grown
by some 2 million barrels per day (bpd) over the past year, according to
Reuters calculations.

"The Med is becoming one of the world's most oversupplied markets and
volumes will have to move out of the region," one veteran Med crude
trader said.

Exports of CPC Blend, a light, sweet crude, rose to 1.0 million bpd in
October, compared with an average of 600,000 bpd in recent years,
largely driven by the first shipments from Kazakhstan's Kashagan field.

As Kashagan is ramping up output, CPC will be shipping around 1.4
million bpd in the next few years.

It is not the first time that the Mediterranean market has become
oversupplied. Excess barrels have occasionally traveled outside the
region to Asia and North America.

Industry sources, however, say cargoes are now traveling much further.

Reuters data shows a vessel with Algerian Saharan crude sailing as far
as Australia and Cuba, while trader Glencore booked a cargo of Libyan
crude for the 20,000-km (12,500-mile) trip to Hawaii and Sweden bought
Kurdish oil for the first time.

CPC is up against the return of Iranian and Libyan barrels, which had
been frozen out of the market by international sanctions in the case of
the former, and civil unrest and violence in the case of the latter.

Iran returned as a global exporter in January this year, increasing its
exports of oil and ultra-light condensate to near five-year highs of
2.56 million bpd in October, from 1.07 million bpd in the same month of
2015.

Iraq ramped up exports to 3.89 million bpd in October from around 2.7
million bpd a year earlier, although most of its shipments abroad tend
to head to Asia.

URALS IS THE NEW BLACK

Libyan output has virtually doubled to just shy of 600,000 bpd in the
last two months and most of that total is exported.

Russia, OPEC's largest rival, has increased overall crude output to
post-Soviet highs above 11 million bpd and a growing chunk of this has
flooded into the Med all the way from the Baltic thanks to cheap freight
rates.

Reuters data shows shipments of Russian crude from the Black Sea port of
Novorossisk to the Mediterranean have remained largely steady in the
year to date, compared with last year, while those from the Baltic have
risen by 12 percent.

With its diversified pipeline infrastructure, Russia can send crude to
the Mediterranean, the Baltic, China and the Pacific. Landlocked
Kazakhstan has only one major option for rising supplies - the CPC
pipeline to the Mediterranean - unless it expands an existing pipeline
to China.

Traders say they anticipate that more refiners will try to blend CPC
with other grades - such as Iraq's heavier Basrah crude - for Asian
customers as one potential way of draining the glut.

But that strategy is not easy to implement given the amount of mercaptan
- a harmless, pungent gas - in CPC.

"You have certain refineries in Italy ... which forbid refining CPC due
to the proximity of the beaches and its awful smell," one veteran trader
said.

Also boosting Med exporters is a narrowing of the premium of Brent oil
over Dubai crude, which acts as a benchmark for Asian-based buyers, to
its smallest in a year at around $2.05 a barrel. That move gives
Brent-linked crudes such as Urals or Saharan an edge in Asia.

(Additional reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov and Julia Payne; Editing by
Dale Hudson)

Source: Europe sends oil as far as Cuba and Australia as glut grows |
Reuters -
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-oil-mediterranean-glut-idUSKBN13A0MT

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