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Energy Battle is More Than OPEC vs U.S. Shale

Posted by March 19, 2018

The market narrative consuming crude oil markets currently is the interplay between supply cuts by OPEC and its allies and rising U.S. shale output, with a side helping of Chinese imports driving demand.
 
While there are solid reasons for industry participants to focus on these dynamics, there is also the risk of missing out on other factors that help shape the market.
 
Such a factor is India, which has long flown below the radar of the crude oil market, despite becoming the second-biggest importer in the fast-growing Asian market behind China, and the third-biggest in the world after the United States.
 
India is also a market where there is virtually no direct influence being exerted by U.S. shale oil as the South Asian nation hardly imports any crude from the United States.
 
It also imports a relatively small amount from Russia, the main ally in the agreement between the Organization of the Petroleum Countries and other producers to limit output in order to drain excess global inventories, thereby boosting crude prices.
 
But what makes India important is that it's a major importer of Middle Eastern crudes, and one of the fastest-growing demand centres in the world.
 
And there are currently some worrying trends for Middle Eastern exporters to India, especially for the region's top shipper, Saudi Arabia.
 
The International Energy Agency (IEA) put India's crude oil demand at 4.68 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2017 in its report released last month, and estimated that this year will see demand rise to 4.98 million bpd, an increase of 6.4 percent.
 
The IEA expects total world oil demand to increase by 1.4 million bpd, which makes India's expected growth of some 300,000 bpd the most significant source of growth for crude producers outside of China's expected lift in demand of about 380,000 bpd.
 
INDIA LOOKS BEYOND THE MIDDLE EAST
 
India has traditionally bought the bulk of its crude oil from the Middle East, which makes sense give the geographic proximity and the decision of India's refiners to focus on processing heavier grades through complex plants in order to maximise the value of fuels produced.
 
However, despite the overall growth in India's crude demand in 2017, the volume of imports from the Middle East dropped by 0.5 percent to around 2.75 million bpd, according to data obtained from sources and compiled by Thomson Reuters Oil Research and Forecasts.
 
Saudi Arabia lost its status as India's biggest oil supplier, with imports from the kingdom dropping 8.9 percent to around 747,900 bpd, the data showed.
 
Other losers from the Middle East included Iran, with a 0.5 percent drop to 470,500 bpd, and the United Arab Emirates with a 16.5 percent slump to 288,500 bpd.
 
The region's winner in exporting to India was Iraq, which increased 12.2 percent to 885,900 bpd, most likely as a result of Baghdad's willingness to offer deeper discounts on its heavier grades of crude compared to similar grades from other exporters.
 
If the Middle East overall was surrendering market share in India, the main gainers were two Latin American exporters, with Brazil's shipments jumping 53 percent to 94,700 bpd and those from Mexico by 15.8 percent to 155,300 bpd.
 
Among smaller suppliers to India, there were some impressive gains from countries such as Egypt, which was up 23.8 percent to 45,200 bpd, Sudan with a gain of 1,157 percent to 21,900 bpd, and Algeria, which rose 125 percent to 47,700 bpd.
 
While many of these increases were off very small volumes, they have the potential to become more important in coming years.
 
If Brazil and Mexico can compete in India, despite a sea voyage of at least four times the distance when compared to cargoes from the Persian Gulf, that should be a worry for Middle East producers.
 
India's refineries have shown they can be quite flexible in the crude slates they process and it appears that the output cuts instituted by OPEC and its allies is encouraging more diverse sources of supply.
 
The risk for OPEC and its allies is that this sort of market share is hard to recover once the self-imposed production cuts are lifted.
 

And as India shows, the battle is far more than just a simple OPEC and allies versus U.S. shale producers. 

 

By Clyde Russell

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