United States crude oil imports from Nigeria in July plunged
to the lowest level in three years and are continuing to slip as Asian and
European buyers increase purchases, trade flow data from Thomson Reuters and
market intelligence firms Genscape and Kpler show.
A narrowing spread between benchmark Brent and Oman crude
futures , trading at less than $2 a barrel compared with more than $4 in May,
has made Nigerian crude more attractive to Asian buyers than U.S. refiners.
World Energy News, quoting Thomson Reuters trade flow data
said Nigerian crude exports to Asia hit 664,000 barrels per day (bpd) in July,
the highest in two years.
That shift cut Nigerian crude arriving at the U.S. East
Coast in July to 1.3 million barrels, or about 43,000 bpd, the lowest since
June 2015. That was down from 7.3 million barrels, or 244,596 bpd, in June,
according to the trade flow data. The East Coast refiners have limited access
to shale flowing from Western fields and tend to run imported crude.
The decline is poised to continue. August U.S. arrivals from
Nigeria are tracking to 91,800 bpd, according to the flow data, down from
242,000 bpd in the same month last year.
“The drop in Nigerian crude appears driven by price spreads,
with less crude being pulled into the U.S. and more heading to Asia in recent
months,” said Matt Smith, director of commodities research at tanker tracking
firm ClipperData.
European imports of Nigerian crude also rose in July, to
602,000 bpd, from 419,000 bpd the previous month, according to Thomson Reuters.
Only two oil tankers, the Marshall Islands-flagged Seacharm
and the Liberia-flagged Pserimos chartered by oil trader Vitol SA, carried
Nigerian crude to the U.S. East Coast in July, discharging in Philadelphia and
Delaware Bay. That was down from eight tankers in June, the data show.
U.S. East Coast refiners took in slightly more domestic
waterborne shipments from the Gulf Coast, adding 16,000 bpd between June and
July. Deliveries from Algeria, Russia and Canada also helped offset the drop
from Nigeria, increasing by a combined 181,000 bpd in July, according to
Genscape.
“The lion’s share of the decrease in incoming Nigerian
imports to the East Coast was offset by imports from other countries,” said
Dylan White, a Genscape oil markets analyst.
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