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China to Start Buying Oil for State Reserves After Crash

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China to Start Buying Oil for State Reserves After Crash
Bloomberg News
April 2, 2020, 1:24 AM EDT
Updated on April 2, 2020, 6:40 AM EDT

  • Beijing sets target to cover 90 days of net oil imports
  • Could be expanded to 180 days when including commercial tanks

China is moving forward with plans to buy up oil for its emergency reserves after an epic price crash, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The world’s biggest importer is taking advantage of a 60% plunge this year to snatch up cheaper barrels for its stockpiles, a source of considerable speculation in the oil market because of the government’s reluctance to release information about their formation, size or use.

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Beijing has asked government agencies to quickly coordinate filling tanks, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is confidential. In addition to state-owned reserves, it may use commercial space for storage as well, while also encouraging companies to fill their own tanks, they said.

The initial target is to hold government stockpiles equivalent to 90 days of net imports, which could eventually be expanded to as much as 180 days when including commercial reserves.

Ninety days of net crude imports is about 900 million barrels, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. While the current size of China’s state reserves is unknown, and Beijing could use a different method for calculating net imports, oil traders and analysts estimated it could amount to China buying an additional 80 million to 100 million barrels over the course of the year.

While the purchases could help soak up some excess supply, traders said it will fall well short of offsetting the overall glut created by the virus lockdowns and the price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose as much as 13% to $27.88 a barrel on Thursday. Oil also got a boost from comments by President Donald Trump that he expected Saudi Arabia and Russia to work out their differences.

Emergency Reserves
The volume targeted is about the same as the Trump administration proposed buying last month for U.S. reserves to help that country’s drillers. The plan was thwarted after Democrats blocked a request for funds.

China is also planning to announce the fourth batch of strategic reserve sites, the people said. The expansion project has the dual advantage of creating larger emergency reserves and as an economic stimulus project to spur construction opportunities as the country recovers from the coronavirus.

Officials at the National Development and Reform Commission, the top economic planner, didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Before the government’s directive was made public, consultancies SIA Energy and Wood Mackenzie Ltd. both estimated that China could probably add 80 million to 100 million barrels to reserves this year before it ran into logistical and operational constraints.

According to SIA, China had about 996 million barrels of oil combined in strategic and commercial storage as of March 31. Another research firm, Orbital Insight, pegged the figure at about 928 million barrels on April 1.

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In September, the head of development and planning at the National Energy Administration said the country had total oil reserves, including strategic stockpiles, for about 80 days. In December, state-owned China National Petroleum Corp. said on its website that the government intends to boost the capacity of its strategic petroleum reserves to 503 million barrels by the end of this year, an indicator of the maximum amount the government can store.

The U.S. currently holds about 635 million barrels in its Strategic Petroleum Reserve, according to government data.
 
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That is too conservative. Should buy more.
I believe building up storage facility never stopped but nobody anticipated a price drop like that. Making use of any type of storage is currently a smart move.
 
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  • 03 Apr 2020
Singapore — China's independent refineries' crude imports from the Middle East jumped 59% on the month in March, with Saudi Arabian shipments climbing to the top second place, a monthly survey by S&P Global Platts showed Friday.

The combined imports from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Oman and the UAE increased to 4.73 million mt, from a lower base of 2.98 million mt in February.

Combined imports from the Middle East accounted for about 38.8% of the total for March.

Those crude barrels from the Middle East were mainly brought in by Hengli Petrochemical, and Zhejiang Petroleum & Chemical, which account for about 66% of the total Middle Eastern grades.

Hengli Petrochemical and Zhejiang have term contracts with Saudi Aramco, making them steady buyers for those grades from Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

Shandong refineries last month also doubled their imports from the Middle East, because crude prices offered were lower than the popular ones like Lula.

Qirun Petrochemical, the leading buyer in Shandong, imported 415,000 mt from the Middle East, including Oman, Omani and KBT crudes, with half of VLCCs each.

Besides Qirun, another seven refineries also imported grades from Iraq, Oman and the UAE.



IMPORTS FROM BRAZIL, ANGOLA DIP


Imports from Brazil and Angola continued to drop in March as shipments from the Middle East rose.

Crude imports from long haul Brazil and Angola, fell by 37.1% and 33.7%, respectively, from February, with the two countries to sliding to the top fourth and fifth places last month.

Brazil and Angola were also two out of three that supplied less to China in March, among the top 10 suppliers.

Brazil and Angola used to be the top two suppliers for China's independent refineries, together with Russia.

In the first three months of the year, total imports from Brazil and Angola dropped 17% year on year, while imports from Russia were up 15% from a year earlier.



RUSSIA REMAINS ON TOP


Russia remained the top supplier to China's independent refineries, with 2.4 million mt of crude arriving in March, up 47.5% on the month.

This was largely due to the fact that more ESPO crude was loaded last month from Russia's Far East, with 32 cargoes exported, up from about 27-28 in 100,000 mt cargoes in previous months.

The imports of Urals crudes from Russia saw a big jump of 95.7% on the month in March, to 994,000 mt.

Urals has become attractive since demand from Europe remained weak, and thus more barrels were sent to the East, according to sources.

ZPC, Hongrun, Hebei Xinhai Petrochemical each took one cargo of about 280,000 mt of Urals, while ChemChina took half of a VLCC last month.

ESPO remained the top grade imported by the highest number of importers at nine, followed by Lula at eight.



IMPORTS FROM NORWAY DOWN


Crudes from Norway continued to slide last month, with Johan Sverdrup and Grane Blend, both down month on month.

But still, four refineries have imported Johan Sverdrup crudes, and three have imported Grane Blend.

The Platts March survey covers crude barrels imported by 38 refineries with import quotas, as well as others without quotas, through ports mostly in the Shandong province, as well as Tianjin, Zhoushan and Dalian for the sector.

The barrels include those imported directly by the refiners, as well as cargoes bought by trading companies on behalf of the independent refiners.

The 38 refiners had been awarded a combined total of 83.96 million mt of import quotas in the first batch, accounting for 84% of the county's total allocations for independent refineries in three batches.

https://www.spglobal.com/platts/en/...pments-to-independent-refiners-jump-59-in-mar
 
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Nice, meanwhile murican energy companies are going bankrupt.
 
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