Iran raises oil exports to West, almost on par with Asia

Iran raises oil exports to West, almost on par with Asia copy

NEW DELHI / Reuters

Iran’s oil exports to the West surged in May to their highest level since the lifting of sanctions in early 2016 and almost caught up with volumes exported to Asia, a source familiar with Iranian oil exports said.
Iran, which used to be OPEC’s second biggest oil exporter, has been raising output since 2016 to recoup market share lost to regional rivals including Saudi Arabia and Iraq. While many Asian nations continued to purchase oil from Iran during sanctions, Western nations halted imports, halving Iran’s overall exports to as little as one million barrels per day (bpd).
Last month, Iran exported about 1.1 million bpd to Europe including Turkey, almost reaching
pre-sanction levels and only slightly below the 1.2 million bpd supplied to Asia, the source told Reuters. Iran’s exports to Asia last month were the lowest since February 2016, Reuters’ calculations showed.
Oil exports to Asia fell as South Korea and Japan stepped up oil condensate purchases and bought less oil, said the source, who asked not to be identified as the information is confidential. “Iran’s condensate parked in floating storage has almost been exhausted because of higher purchases by Japan and Korea,” the source said.
Exports to Asia were also hit by India’s decision to cut annual purchases from Iran by a fifth for the fiscal year to March 2018. After the lifting of sanctions, Tehran added new clients such as Litasco and Lotos and won back customers such as Total , ENI, Tupras, Repsol, Cepsa and Hellenic Petroleum.

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