Russia
faces battle with Saudi Arabia over European oil market share
RT,
16
October, 2015
European
oil refineries seem to be turning to Saudi instead of Russian crude.
The Kingdom has been cutting prices to win market share away from
Russia which accounts for 25 percent of crude consumption in Europe.
According
to Reuters,
oil majors Exxon, Shell, Total and Eni have been buying more crude
from Riyadh for their refineries in Western Europe and the
Mediterranean in the past few months at the expense of Russian oil.
"I'm
buying less and less Russian crude for my refineries in Europe simply
because Saudi barrels are looking more attractive. It is a no brainer
for me as Saudi crude is just cheaper," a
trading source in a major European company told Reuters, who
preferred to stay anonymous.
The
average price of Russian Urals oil in January - September 2015 was
about $ 54.40 per barrel (compared to $ 105.07 for the same period
last year). However, an analyst from Russia’s Uralsib bank Aleksey
Kokin says Saudi contracts with European companies are looking at
benchmarks such as Brent and Dubai, which are priced at $48-49 per
barrel.
"And
the Saudis are ready to offer a discount of $0.5-1.00 per barrel to
this price,” he told Russian
online newspaper Gazeta.ru
According
to the analyst, Russia provides nearly 25 percent of the oil used in
Europe (Europe consumes about 14 million barrels a day, or 700
million tonnes of oil per year). The Russian share of European oil
imports is around 35 percent.
"Saudi
Arabia can painlessly provide Europe with an additional 1 million
barrels per day," says
Kokin.
This
would come at Russia's expense and its share of the European market
would decline by almost a third, he dded.
Rosneft
CEO Igor Sechin says Saudi Arabia is reducing prices to reach new
markets.
"In
terms of competition, we are seeing now that Saudi Arabia has even
come on the Polish market, where it has never been; it’s supplying
raw materials through Gdansk. Actively dumping,” he
said.
Russian
Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak echoed Sechin’s concern, saying
that Saudi Arabia’s entry into the Eastern European markets
was "tough
competition.”
Saudi Arabia targets Russia in battle for European oil market
15
October, 2015
From
global majors such as Shell (RDSa.L) and Total (TOTF.PA) to more
modest Polish energy firms, oil refiners in Europe are cutting their
longstanding use of Russian crude in favour of Saudi grades as the
world's top exporters fight for market share.
Russia
has for years been muscling in on Asian markets where Saudi Arabia
was once the unchallenged dominant supplier. But now Riyadh is
retaliating in Moscow's backyard of Europe with aggressive price
discounting.
This
has nothing to do with Western sanctions imposed on Russia over
Ukraine, which apply to energy industry equipment but not to oil or
gas itself. Instead it is a commercial battle for customers as both
exporters ramp up their output despite weak world oil prices.
This
is likely to complicate further a dialogue between Moscow and the
OPEC exporters' group on tackling the global oil glut, with joint
production cuts already looking elusive.
Trading
sources told Reuters that majors such as Exxon, Shell, Total and Eni
have been all buying more Saudi oil for their refineries in Western
Europe and the Mediterranean in the past few months at the expense of
Russian oil.
"I'm
buying less and less Russian crude for my refineries in Europe simply
because Saudi barrels are looking more attractive. It is a no brainer
for me as Saudi crude is just cheaper," said a trading source
with one major, who asked not to be named because he is not allowed
to speak to the media.
Riyadh
traditionally focussed on the U.S. and Asian markets, leaving Moscow
as a major supplier to Europe, especially the eastern countries that
were once part of the Soviet bloc.
But
Russia's most powerful oil executive, Rosneft (ROSN.MM) chief Igor
Sechin, said on Tuesday that Saudi Arabia had started supplying
ex-communist Poland at "dumping" prices. Then on Wednesday,
Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak described the Saudi entry
into eastern European markets was the "toughest competition".
Trading
sources said at least one cargo reached the Polish port of Gdansk in
September and two more could come in October, to be processed by
refiners PKN Orlen and Lotos.
Two
trading sources said Saudi Arabia was looking at storing crude in
Gdansk so that it can supply eastern European customers more quickly,
just as it has done for years for western European clients from ports
in the Netherlands or Belgium.
One
trader said supplies from Gdansk could be sent to Germany to compete
with Russian crude sent down the Soviet-built Druzhba (Friendship)
pipeline.
The
Baltic state of Lithuania, once a Soviet republic, is also looking to
diversify its energy supplies. Lithuanian energy minister Rokas
Masiulis told Reuters on Wednesday that the country is in talks with
U.S. liquefied natural gas company Cheniere Energy Inc (LNG.A) over
possible imports as it tries to cut its dependence on Russian
supplier Gazprom (GAZP.MM).
LOCKING
MARKET SHARE
The
battle may raise suspicions in Moscow that Riyadh is trying to punish
the Kremlin for supporting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, an enemy
of Saudi Arabia, most recently with Russian air strikes on rebel
groups.
In
fact, Moscow and Riyadh were already locked in another battle for
market share in Asia long before Syria slid into civil war after 2011
or the West imposed the sanctions on Russia last year.
Over
the past decade, Russia has diverted as much as a third of its oil
exports to Asia by building gigantic pipelines into mainland China
and its Pacific coast.
"There
is a perception that because Russia has been pushed from the West,
they have been turning to the East. In fact, Russia has been actively
locking market share in Asia for a long time," said Seth
Kleinman, the head of energy research at Citigroup.
Kleinman
said the competition has become so intense in Asian markets in recent
months that Saudi Arabia had to reduce supplies there in the face of
growing deliveries from rivals such as Russia, Kuwait and Angola.
Meanwhile,
the low oil prices have spurred demand in Europe after years of
lacklustre performance.
"For
the first time in many years the European market looks more
interesting than the Asian market. So Middle Eastern producers are
looking to take that opportunity," a senior Iraqi oil source
told Reuters.
The
competition is likely to intensify in the next few months as Iran,
which supplied between five and 10 percent of Europe's crude before
2012, is set to return with large volumes if and when Western
sanctions on Tehran are lifted.
"The
Saudis want to secure the market share before Iran comes back,"
said a trading source with an oil major.
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