Russia reemerges as China's top oil supplier
SINGAPORE (Bloomberg) -- Russia retook the top spot from Saudi Arabia in crude supplies to China last month as OPEC producers are flirting with the possibility of extending a deal to curb production.
The world’s largest energy consumer increased imports from Russia by about 9.3% to 4.69 million metric tons in March from February, according to data released Tuesday by the General Administration of Customs. That’s also up 0.9% from a year earlier. Saudi Arabia, the biggest crude exporter, retreated to the third-biggest seller last month from the top position a month earlier as shipments fell 4.6% to 4.55 million tons.
Russia and Saudi Arabia along with other major producers have been competing for a bigger slice in China amid the output cut deal led by OPEC. The Asian nation imported a record amount of crude last month, topping the U.S. as the world’s biggest buyer during the first quarter. While some of OPEC members are considering prolonging the historic agreement beyond June when the group and its allies meet next month, it will be closely watched whether the non-OPEC producer Russia will join again.
“For sure, Russia has been focusing on China as a key market,” said Virendra Chauhan, an oil analyst at Energy Aspects in Singapore. The country “will certainly focus on the Chinese market going forward, we don’t expect them to concede market share here. It will be difficult for Russia to extend the deal across the second half, given output typically rises in the second half.”
Energy Minister Alexander Novak will hold talks with Russian oil companies this week before his meeting with OPEC and non-OPEC counterparts in Vienna on May 25. Russian production is typically flat or lower in the first half of the year, according to a report by Sberbank CIB.
Angola, the third-biggest seller to China in February, rose to number two in March, boosting sales by 43% from a month earlier to 4.67 million tons, customs data showed. China’s total crude imports climbed 11% to a record 9.21 MMbpd last month from February, according to customs data released April 13. Shipments during the first quarter rose 15% to almost 105 million tons, or about 8.5 MMbpd.