Iraq, Iran boosted crude exports in September

378796 09: A pipeline carries oil September 20, 2000 at the Federal Strategic Petroleum Reserve facility known as Big Hill near Beaumont, Texas. It is one of four crude oil storage sites run by the U.S. government that could be tapped to ease the oil crisis. The Big Hill facility has 14 underground solution-mined storage caverns that have a combined storage capacity of 160 million barrels. The site has demonstrated the capability to deliver crude at 930,000 barrels per day. The Big Hill site is connected via a 25-mile, 36-inch pipeline to the Sun Marine Terminal and the Unocal Marine Terminal at Nederland, Texas. The pipeline also interconnects with the Texaco 20-inch pipeline system in Port Arthur, Texas. The reserve, created in 1975 after the Arab oil embargo, is intended to provide a stopgap in case of disruptions in oil imports. It has been used only once, during the Gulf War in 1991. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Newsmakers)

Bloomberg

Iraq and Iran boosted crude exports in September, taking advantage of a slower pace of shipments from rival Saudi Arabia to win buyers in key markets like China and the U.S.
Iraq shipped 3.98 million barrels of crude a day, the highest since December, while Iran’s exports rose to 2.28 million barrels a day, the most since February, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. Saudi Arabia’s exports were 6.68 million barrels a day, the second-lowest for this year, the data show.
Iran and Iraq’s moves to grab market share cast a light on internal tensions within OPEC as Saudi Arabia, the group’s de facto leader and world’s top oil exporter, works to re-balance the global market. State-run Saudi Arabian Oil Co., known as Aramco, will make the deepest cuts in supplies to customers in its history in November, the energy ministry said Monday.
“Iraq and Iran are both very opportunistic in selling into markets where buyers are no longer getting the same Saudi volumes,” said Richard Mallinson, an oil analyst at Energy Aspects Ltd. in London. “We’ve seen Saudi Arabia’s exports lower over the last several months, which is consistent with their focus on the re-balancing process.”
Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih promised in May that the country would “markedly” reduce exports to the US in an
effort to curb swollen crude
inventories. Shipments to the US dropped from March through August, when they reached the lowest this year, according to the tanker data.
Overall Saudi exports plunged to the lowest in 34 months in July and were about 1 million less than a year earlier, according to the Joint Organisations Data Initiative. Riyadh-based JODI collects data including production and exports directly from countries.
Iraq exported 871,000 barrels of crude a day to the U.S. in September, exceeding Saudi Arabia for a second straight month, according to tanker tracking data. Iraq shipped almost twice as much crude as the Saudis did to the U.S. in August, the data show. Iraq has also edged out Saudi Arabia as the biggest supplier to India, selling more crude to the world’s second-most-populous country for seven months this year, according to tanker tracking data. Iraq’s average sales to India are 794,000 barrels a day in 2017 so far compared with 738,000 barrels a day for the Saudis. Aramco Chief Executive Amin Nasser opened an office in India this week to market crude and refined products and to target investment plans for the world’s fastest-growing oil market.
Farther east, Iran is gaining on Saudi Arabia in crude sales to China.The difference between China’s imports of Saudi oil and Iranian crude is at an eight-year low, according to customs data from the East Asian country.
Saudi Arabia shipped 833,000 barrels of crude a day to China in September, compared with 600,000 barrels a day from Iran. OPEC’s third-largest producer has ramped up output and doubled exports since sanctions on its energy industry were eased in January 2016.
“In Iran, I’m expecting production to keep creeping up in the coming months and that exports will be up slightly,’’ said Robin Mills, chief executive officer of Dubai-based consultant Qamar Energy. “I do see them taking market share slowly from the Saudis, if the Saudis hold steady on their production cuts.”
Iran and Iraq will have to fight to keep their gains. Both are subject to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ production caps, and while they are working to raise output capacity, they are already pumping at or close to their limits. Mallinson said their efforts to win market share won’t put OPEC’s production cuts at risk. Iran, still facing some U.S. restrictions on financing, is seeking investment and technology to raise output.
Once the OPEC cuts deal expires, Saudi Arabia will be able to pump more oil and potentially return to the record level of 10.7 million barrels a day it reached in July 2016. Saudi exports usually dip in the kingdom’s summer months as domestic demand rises and then increase as the weather cools.
OPEC is to meet in November to discuss a possible extension of the deal beyond March. Improving demand may mean there’s room for all in the market when the deal is over, according to Mallinson.
“We’re seeing a market shift as stockpiles begin to clear, and there will be more demand,” the Energy Aspects analyst said. “There shouldn’t be a problem in placing barrels when OPEC does resume full production after the current cuts end.”

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