China And India Are Buying Less Russian Crude

Hamilton Nwosa
Writer
U.S. Senators Propose Secondary Sanctions On Russian Oil

Ad

Regina Daniels Vs Ned Nwoko: The Fleeting Illusion of Life

By Fred Chukwuelobe Once upon a time dazzling Regina Daniels and wealthy Senator Ned Nwoko were love birds. They bestrode the world and were the ultimate love birds not withstanding the age difference between them. Some saw the relationship as “child abuse” as Daniels was still a teenager and Nwoko an elder. The two cared…

UK Urges Citizens to Avoid Visits to Several Nigerian States Amid Escalating Insecurity

By Abiola Olawale ​The United Kingdom's Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office (FCDO) has issued a travel advisory, advising British citizens to avoid all travel to six Nigerian states due to escalating security threats from terrorism, kidnapping, and violent crime. This was contained in the latest Foreign Travel Advice released by the GOV.UK and sighted on…

Tinubu Hails Soludo’s Landslide Re-Election, Calls Victory ‘Affirmation of Visionary Leadership’

By Abiola Olawale ​President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has offered his congratulations to Anambra State Governor, Professor Charles Chukwuma Soludo, following his victory in Saturday's off-cycle gubernatorial election. The President described the win as a powerful "affirmation of visionary leadership." ​Soludo, a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and candidate of the All…

Ad

Asian nations are letting up on discounted Russian oil exports, with Bloomberg data showing a 13% decline over the past four weeks as Chinese and Indian demand ease, chipping away at Russian oil revenues.

China and India account for purchases of 55% of Russia’s seaborne oil exports; however, Chinese demand over the past four weeks has dropped by 52,000 barrels per day, while Indian demand has eased by 18%, according to Bloomberg.

Reuters also reports that Chinese state-run Sinopec–the biggest refiner in Asia–reduced purchases of discounted Russian ESPO crude oil this month after refusing to outbid Indian buyers.

Citing trading sources, Reuters said Sinpoec’s move was purely mathematical and not geopolitical.

In May and June, Sinopec bought some 20 million barrels of Russian ESPO crude, but is expected to purchase less for July because it was outbid by Indian refiners. According to the report, Sinopec bid for Russian ESPO at a $20-per-barrel discount to the Middle East benchmark price. Other Chinese buyers, including state-owned CNOOC and PetroChina, outbid Sinopec in July.

That $20 discount is what Sinopec was getting in May and June, but for July, other bidders are offering to lift Russian ESPO for a $13 discount, and some for as low as an $8 discount, according to Reuters.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February and subsequent Western sanctions saw both China and India race to scoop up discounted Russian crude, netting Moscow’s war coffers some $24 billion in March, April and May from sales to the two Asian nations alone, according to Reuters.

Beginning in May, however, China has seen a 14% decline in Russian oil purchases due to renewed COVID-19 lockdowns that hampered Chinese demand.

Last week, Bloomberg reported that Russian crude exports to China and India were down 30% from their peak in April and May, shortly after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine and sanctions were put into place.

NB: Charles Kennedy wrote this article for Oilprice.com

Ad

X whatsapp