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China buys up Saudi, Russian oil to squeeze Iran

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EXCLUSIVE - China buys up Saudi, Russian oil to squeeze Iran

By Judy Hua and Alex Lawler
BEIJING/LONDON | Tue Feb 7, 2012 1:33pm EST

(Reuters) - China is scouring the world for alternative oil supplies to replace a fall in its imports from Iran, as it seeks to negotiate lower prices from Tehran, and has been drawing heavily on Saudi Arabia.

Industry sources told Reuters that Beijing had bought the bulk of an increase in crude oil supplies from top oil exporter Saudi Arabia in the last few months.

The world's second-largest oil consumer is also importing more cargoes from West Africa, Russia and Australia to replace reduced supplies from Iran.

China is the top buyer of Iranian oil, taking around 20 percent of its total exports, but since January it has cut purchases by around 285,000 barrels per day (bpd), or just over half of the total daily amount it imported in 2011.

Saudi Arabian output reached 9.76 million barrels per day (bpd) in December, up 360,000 bpd from October, OPEC data show, and has remained near that level in January, according to a Reuters survey. Several sources in the oil industry said China has bought a good part of the extra oil.

"On average, Saudi exports went up by 200,000 barrels per day and this went to the East, overwhelmingly to China," said one of the sources, a senior executive with the trading arm of a U.S. oil company.

A source familiar with the matter, who declined to be identified by name, also said the kingdom had been supplying about an extra 200,000 bpd to China since November.

Oil traders believe Unipec, the trading arm of China's top refiner Sinopec Corp. (0386.HK), has been using a flexibility clause in deals, known as tolerance, to buy more oil under term contracts, especially as Saudi official selling prices in the past two months have been attractive.

"Under the current circumstances, it is necessary to use the tolerance to adjust lifting volumes," a Chinese oil trader said.

Unipec declined to comment.

Official Chinese data also show an increase in crude oil imports from Saudi Arabia in the last few months, but on a smaller scale than the rise given by the industry sources.

China imported 1.12 million bpd of crude from Saudi Arabia in December, customs data show, down from 1.17 million bpd in November. That is still up from October's 1.07 million bpd.

"GAMBLING'

Industry sources were unsure if the trend towards higher supplies from Saudi and others would continue, once China finishes negotiations with Iran over term purchasing contracts.

Some traders suspect China's increased buying of alternatives may be a ploy to bolster its bargaining position in the supply talks with Tehran. Iran is keen to secure customers as new EU sanctions banning its oil, designed to discourage the country's nuclear programme, add to U.S. measures.

Officials from the two countries were expected to hold talks as early as this week in Beijing.

"Unipec is gambling now," said a Beijing-based oil trader. "If the Iranian side can compromise and reach a term deal, Unipec will get a large volume of crude at favourable prices, offsetting the premiums it paid to buy alternative oil over the past months."

Those alternatives include Unipec's purchase of five Russian ESPO cargoes, or 3.65 million barrels, for March loading at a premium of around $6.00 a barrel to Dubai quotes, traders said. Unipec also bought a cargo of Russian Urals crude, which will arrive in China around March.

"ESPO are all spot cargoes and are close to China. Buying ESPO is practical and easy to handle," a trader said.

As well as crude, Unipec has bought four shipments of Australian North West Shelf (NWS) condensate and Bayu Undan condensate from the Timor Sea for March to fill in for lower Iranian supplies.

A Reuters survey of oil flows from West Africa on Monday suggested Asia's imports of crude from the region are at a record high.

Even so, China still needs Iranian oil and even Saudi Arabia and the rest of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries do not have the capacity to replace it.

With production believed to be around 9.75 million bpd in January, Saudi Arabia holds about 2.75 million bpd of idle production capacity to meet any sudden shortages - less than Iran's output of 3.5 million bpd. Saudi holds the world's only significant unused capacity.

"Iranian crude is important," said an official at a Chinese state oil firm, who declined to be identified. "It is not very easy to replace all Iranian crude."

(Additional reporting by Nidhi Verma in New Delhi, Chen Aizhu in Beijing, Francis Kan in Singapore and Peg Mackey in London; Editing by Anthony Barker)

EXCLUSIVE - China buys up Saudi, Russian oil to squeeze Iran | Reuters
 
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china has diversified its energy import as a long-standing policy, and it is for precisely that reason that even when it imports from more oil producers it will value its friendship with iran above those because iran's oil policy isn't vulnerable to jewish or anglo-saxon influence. china's policy of diversification is designed to free itself from any possible jewish or anglo-american blackmail, not iranian blackmail. i guess jewish media and propaganda just completely misunderstood us.
 
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India should pick up the slack by buying more oil at a cheaper price from Iran. We'll both be better off.
Aleady done. Iran will be forced to buy Indian products for oil sales:

Iranian envoy: India will buy oil partly in rupees

Published February 07, 2012
Associated Press

NEW DELHI -- Iran's envoy in New Delhi says India will make 45 percent of payments for Iranian oil in rupees as Western sanctions hinder international bank transactions.

Seyed Mehdi Nabizadeh said Tuesday the central banks of the two countries also agreed Iran would use the currency to buy goods from India.

An Indian external affairs ministry official in New Delhi said he was not aware of the purported agreement. The official who spoke on condition of anonymity said India was exploring all options to ensure oil supplies are not disrupted.

The United States and European Union recently imposed tougher sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program. Past sanctions delayed payments as Indian oil importers have had to scramble to find banks willing to handle transactions with Iran.

Iranian Envoy: India Will Buy Oil Partly In Rupees | Fox News
 
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So much for big talk by cina of supporting iran eh?
 
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Nevertheless, Iran will not be able to utilize so many rupees, so there may be a small reduction in purchases from Iran.

India will have to do a balancing act. Iran offers an alternate route to Afghanistan and Central Asia. They have an important stabilizing role to play in Afghanistan. But we have to respond to Israeli concerns also. We have a fruitful defense and trade relationship with them. We cannot forget the timely supply of artillery shells during the Kargil crisis, and technology transfer deals such as the Green Pine radar.
 
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Nevertheless, Iran will not be able to utilize so many rupees, so there may be a small reduction in purchases from Iran.

India will have to do a balancing act. Iran offers an alternate route to Afghanistan and Central Asia. They have an important stabilizing role to play in Afghanistan. But we have to respond to Israeli concerns also. We have a fruitful defense and trade relationship with them. We cannot forget the timely supply of artillery shells during the Kargil crisis, and technology transfer deals such as the Green Pine radar.

War has another facet . Business. That's at play here.
 
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Pakistan traders shy away from Iran as sanctions hurt

ISLAMABAD: Payment problems are making Pakistani traders increasingly reluctant to do business with Iran as Western sanctions pile pressure, a Pakistan government official and the country’s rice exporters association said on Wednesday.
While earlier restrictions have made it difficult to trade with Iran, fresh sanctions earlier this year including US ones against Iranian financial institutions and European Union sanctions on crude imports have tightened the noose further.
Iranian importers are now finding it much more difficult to settle payments for critical imports, including food items, officials and traders said.
“They are facing a foreign reserves issue because of sanctions. They don’t want to import too much and reduce their reserves,” Shoaib Anwar, an assistant director at the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan told Reuters.
“This is the outcome of the sanctions, that’s the reason for these issues.”
Iran’s rial has plunged as the sanctions take effect, raising the price of imports for the economy and making it difficult to find Dubai-based middlemen who can process payments to keep the country’s trade flowing.
“We use lines of credit opened through agents in Dubai, but that too has become difficult because of sanctions and the resulting currency fluctuations,” said Javed Agha, chairman of the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan.
Rice is Pakistan’s biggest export to Iran, almost 60 percent of a total of $161.94 million in the 2010-11 financial year.
Other Pakistan food exports to Iran, like fruits and vegetables, have also been hit by sanctions, Anwar said.
In the first quarter of the current financial year (July to September 2011), Pakistan exported rice worth $17.03 million, down from $22.16 million in the same quarter of the previous year.
Bread and rice dominate the diet of most Iranians, many of whom can no longer afford to buy meat, which now sells for about $30 a kilogram in Tehran.
Bread prices have tripled since December, while rice costs about $5 per kg (2.2 lbs). Iranians earn about $350 a month on average, while officials put the poverty line at $800.
Iran imported 62 percent of its maize, 45 percent of its rice and 59 percent of its sugar in 2010-11, but only 3 percent of its wheat, data from the US Department of Agriculture shows.
Indian exporters said on Tuesday that Iranian buyers had defaulted on $144 million in payments for rice imports, and the All India Rice Exporters’ Association called on members to cease exports to Iran on credit terms.
Iran is facing similar problems with traders in Malaysia, China and Ukraine. Tehran’s crude oil customers are also cutting back on purchases.

Pakistan traders shy away from Iran as sanctions hurt – The Express Tribune
 
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So much for big talk by cina of supporting iran eh?

It's called prudence. One does not put all it's eggs in one basket. You diversify your portfolio. Why should China not diversity it's energy needs? A lot of countries aren't as smart when it comes to diversification. In Canada, 80% of our trade is with the Americans. Now, we're scrambling to find other markets. Politicians are just idiots on this side of the pond.
 
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This is pure propaganda galore from Israel and West as their oil embargo scheme utterly failed. China is simply stocking up at low price as price will be higher in near future. Percentage of oil China imports from Iran will more or less remain same. Chinese officials made that clear number of times.

Good move by India as well, hope this is not just one off move to get better bargain from US.
 
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im saying this again.....israelis and iranians have nothing to fight for.....this palestine is an arab-israeli dispute...iran should stay neutral in this conflict.....
 
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China's relations with Saudi Arabia is ten folds more close to Chinese relations with Iran. I mean here look at this: Jazan is the only city in the middle east which has Chinese as an official language instead of English:
11225748959.jpg
 
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China's relations with Saudi Arabia is ten folds more close to Chinese relations with Iran. I mean here look at this: Jazan is the only city in the middle east which has Chinese as an official language instead of English:
11225748959.jpg

It is a good translation. I'm surprised Saudi Arabia has so many people who know Chinese well. In many developing or even developed countries, their Chinese translators are horrible.
 
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This is pure propaganda galore from Israel and West as their oil embargo scheme utterly failed. China is simply stocking up at low price as price will be higher in near future. Percentage of oil China imports from Iran will more or less remain same. Chinese officials made that clear number of times.

Good move by India as well, hope this is not just one off move to get better bargain from US.

No it is true ... Iran is facing pressure from all sides now with China is shifting its purchase away from Iran. I know many Iranians also converted their entire savings in USD while ago .. most of them are middle class and Iraqi traders and currency traders are reducing their trad in Iran's currency like any thing.
Most of Irani people don't have good faith in their own currency and that's for government have to ban/control USD trading and prices. There is no propaganda, Iran as whole country and its people are facing high unemployment and inflation and this crisis is adding fuel in it.
Even USA and its partners are not looking for war they want people of Iran to suffer and so they will pressurize government to take steps and those steps will be to follow USA demands more or less..
IRan has to sell its oil at cheaper rate to China and India and thats it self is big loss.
 
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