Saudi Arabia is China's top oil supplier for seventh straight month
BEIJING: China’s crude oil imports from top supplier Saudi Arabia rose 8.8 percent in March from a year earlier, driven by strong demand and as shipments delayed due to a port congestion finally arrived.
Imports from the United Arab Emirates also rose again, up 86
percent, as some Iranian barrels were believed to have slipped in. Shipments
from Saudi Arabia were 7.84 million tons, equivalent to 1.85 million barrels
per day (bpd), data issued by China’s General Administration of Customs showed
on Tuesday.
That was higher than 1.7 million bpd a year earlier, but
below imports of 1.94 million bpd in February. Saudi Arabia retained its
position as China’s biggest crude oil supplier for a seventh consecutive month.
Ports at China’s oil refining hub Shandong experienced congestion for a few
weeks over January and February, slowing oil arrivals. China’s crude oil
imports from Russia rose 6 percent in March to 1.75 million bpd from a year
ago, but slipped from 1.91 million bpd in February. Analysts from Refinitiv
expect arrivals from Saudi Arabia to further drop in April given a voluntary
supply cut of 1 million bpd by the producer and increasing prices of Arab light
crude for the Asian market.
Appetite of spot oil would turn to more price competitive
African sources, with China’s imports from Angola at 0.74 million bpd in March,
versus 0.73 mln bpd a month ago. The customs data also showed that crude oil
supplies from Kuwait increased to 0.6 million bpd, up 29 percent from a year
earlier. China’s imports from the UAE were at 0.71 million bpd last month, up
86 percent on year. Shipments from Oman rose 60 percent from a year ago to 0.86
million bpd.
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