Saudi offers extra 3 mn barrels to India in August

Saudi Arabia has agreed to sell 3 million barrels of additional crude oil to India next month to make up for supply cut by Iran over unpaid bills, touching USD 7 billion.

New Delhi: Saudi Arabia has agreed to sell 3 million barrels of additional crude oil to India next month to make up for supply cut by Iran over unpaid bills, touching USD 7 billion.
     
Saudi Aramco, the national oil firm of Saudi Arabia, will supply one million barrels each to Essar Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum in August while Mangalore Refinery, too, is in talks to contract similar volumes, officials said Tuesday.
     
Iran, which had towards the end of June warned of stopping exports to India unless dues are cleared, has not informed refiners of crude shipments for the month of August.
     
The additional supplies committed by Saudi Arabia is roughly one-third of what India imports from Iran, officials said, adding that more crude was being contracted from the UAE, Iraq and Kuwait as well as Latin America.
     
Oil exports from Iran make up for about 12 percent of India's oil needs.
     
Refiners have not been able to clear payments for oil they buy from Iran after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which was acting under US pressure, halted on December 23 the use of a clearing mechanism run by regional central banks.
     
The outstanding amount has now topped USD 7 billion and Iran, which has till now been selling some 400,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil in credit all this while. Iran wants a payment mechanism to be put in place before more oil can be shipped.
     
Officials said BPCL had signed up for import of 1 million tonnes (20,000 bpd) from Iran this year. The supplies were to start in August, but uncertainty over payments has meant that it will not get any crude.
     
"Iran has been a very generous supplier. No one else in the world sells such huge volumes on credit without any guarantee but Iran has been doing so thus far. But we have a problem at hand and we can understand Iranian frustration," an official said.
     
US pressure and UN sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme have made banks unwilling to transfer payments for oil that Indian refiners import.
     
Further, Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Ltd (MRPL), India's biggest buyer of Iranian crude at 142,000 bpd, is talking with Saudi Aramco and Abu Dhabi National Oil Co for supplies. Discussion is also going on for securing Latin American crude supplies.
     
Saudi crude will make for one-third of Essar's 110,000 bpd of oil that the private refiner had contracted from Iran.
     
Besides Saudi Arabia, HPCL is talking to UAE to make up for the shortfall of 2 cargoes per month it gets from Iran under its 68,000 bpd annual supply contract.
     
India's debt to Iran for unpaid oil has mounted to more than USD 7 billion after RBI last December stopped using the Asian Currently Union, winning praise from the US which is using sanctions to force Tehran to halt its nuclear programme.

PTI

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