China oil demand helps Kingdom challenge Russia’s export crown
SINGAPORE: Saudi Arabia is set to expand its market share in
China this year for the first time since 2012, with demand stirred up by
new Chinese refiners pushing the Kingdom back into contention with
Russia as top supplier to the world’s largest oil buyer.
Saudi
Arabia, the biggest global oil exporter, has been surpassed by Russia as
top crude supplier to China in the past two years as private “teapot”
refiners and a new pipeline drove up demand for Russian oil.
Now
fresh demand from new refineries starting up in 2019 could increase
China’s Saudi oil imports by between 300,000 barrels per day (bpd) and
700,000 bpd, nudging the OPEC kingpin back toward the top, analysts say.
Saudi
Aramco said last week it will sign five crude supply agreements that
will take its 2019 contract totals with Chinese buyers to 1.67 million
bpd.
“With the recent crude oil supply agreements and potential
increase of refinery capacity, the Saudis could overtake the Russians
and reclaim (the) crown as the biggest crude exporter to China,” Rystad
Energy analyst Paola Rodriguez-Masiu said.
Saudi Arabia has
already gained ground this year. China imported 1.04 million bpd of
Saudi crude in the first 10 months of 2018, China customs data showed.
This is equivalent to 11.5 percent of total Chinese imports, up from 11
percent in 2017, Reuters calculations showed.
Saudi Arabia’s
market share in China could jump to nearly 17 percent next year, if
buyers requested full contractual volumes, analysts from Rystad Energy
and Refinitiv said, while growth in Russian supply to China could slow.
China
imported 1.39 million bpd of Russian crude in January-October this
year, about 15 percent of total Chinese imports, customs data showed.
Russia had a 14 percent share at 1.2 million bpd in 2017.
“We
expect Chinese imports of Russian crude to remain at a similar rate in
2019 as a large share of these Russian barrels are imported via
pipeline,” Refinitiv analyst Mark Tay said.
The biggest boost to
Saudi exports to China comes from contracts inked with new refineries
starting up this year and next, owned by companies other than state oil
giants Sinopec or PetroChina.
The contracts include 130,000 bpd
to Dalian Hengli Petrochemical and up to 170,000 bpd to Zhejiang
Petrochemical Corp, each of which has a 400,000-bpd refinery.
Saudi
Aramco has also agreed to increase Sinochem Corp’s supplies, which will
be processed at its Quanzhou and Hongrun refineries. Sinopec,
PetroChina and China National Offshore Oil Corp. have all kept their
term Saudi volumes for next year unchanged.
Beijing-based consultancy SIA Energy expects Saudi crude imports to rise by 300,000 bpd in 2019, raising its market share
to 13.7 percent, but leaving it behind Russia.
“We
expect lower Saudi crude demand from Hengli and Rongsheng as it is
unlikely for them to run their refineries at full rate in 2019,” analyst
Seng Yick Tee said.
A source familiar with Aramco’s export plans
said there is tremendous appetite from China’s independents, and that
it needed to be more aggressive in its marketing strategy.
The state oil company did move more swiftly to seal the most recent deals than it used to in the past, industry sources said.
Aramco’s
first deal with Hengli was to supply 20 million barrels of crude, about
55,000 bpd, in 2018, said a senior source. “Hengli executed the 2018
deal nicely, which helped build trust,” he said.
Hengli is
designed to process 90 percent Saudi crude, a mix of Arab Medium and
Arab Heavy, while the remaining 10 percent is Brazilian Marlim crude.
Rongsheng’s plant is identical to Hengli, the industry sources said.
The sources spoke on condition of anonymity.
Aramco
is also supplying PetroChina’s refinery in China’s southwestern Yunnan
province with about 4 million barrels a month of crude via a pipeline
from Myanmar between July and November, Eikon data showed, although
sources said talks for Saudi Arabia to acquire a stake in the refinery
have stalled.
Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said on Monday the
company will push to expand its market share in China and is still
looking for new refining deals there despite OPEC’s likely limits on
output next year.
Saudi Aramco will supply up to 70 percent of
the oil required at its 300,000-bpd joint venture refinery in Malaysia
with Petronas. Between China and Malaysia alone, Saudi Arabia will have
to increase exports to
Asia by more than 500,000 bpd next year.
This comes as OPEC is discussing production cuts of as much as
1.4 million bpd for next year to prop up oil prices.
Between
balancing global supplies and increasing market in Asia, Aramco may
decide to “forgo market share in other markets like the US, where the
surge in domestic production will make it difficult for the Saudis to
retain market share anyway,” Rystad’s Rodriguez-Masiu said.
Saudi’s oil shipments to the US have risen recently to above
1 million bpd, but US output is also increasing, said the source familiar with Saudi Aramco’s export plans.
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