Oil Traders Start Work of Cleaning Russian Cargoes
(Bloomberg) -- Oil traders are starting the slow process of cleaning up cargoes of Russian crude that were loaded onto tankers at a port in the Baltic Sea during a contamination crisis. Doing so will involve cargo transfers on the high seas, shipping barrels thousands of miles, and -- finally -- careful dilution to avoid damaging oil refineries.
Almost 10 million barrels of crude were loaded at Ust-Luga around the time the contamination crisis came to light late last month. Much of the supply, most of which would normally be delivered locally, has been sitting on ships in northwest Europe ever since, while the companies that bought the cargoes -- including Glencore Plc and Vitol Group -- figured out what to do.
Now, several of those same vessels have begun heading to dedicated cargo-transfer sites off the coasts of Denmark and the U.K. to discharge their consignments onto bigger supertankers more suited to long-haul trades. From there, traders and industry officials anticipate the barrels flowing to Asian destinations including China, where the cargoes will be carefully drip-fed into the refining system. The voyage, roughly 12,500 nautical miles, will take about 45 days.
Ust-Luga, which handled about 200 million barrels of crude last year, got caught up in the same contamination crisis that caused the vital Druzhba pipeline to stop, forcing refineries in several European countries to dip into emergency reserves, cut processing rates, and tap alternative supplies.
Glencore and Vitol declined to comment.
Refinery officials in Asia say that the barrels in question are likely to be diluted with 10 to 12 times more uncontaminated crude to avoid the plants becoming damaged. Some traders have speculated that some cargoes might even be used by power plants in Saudi Arabia, a move that would free up more of the kingdom’s crude for export this summer.
The complicated process of cleaning up the cargoes is being mirrored by what’s happening with supplies in the Druzhba pipeline, an overland link that delivered roughly 1 million barrels a day to European plants before it was halted by the crisis. The conduit still hasn’t fully returned to normal.
The premium of Europe’s Brent crude futures to swaps for Middle Eastern Dubai oil climbed to a seven-month high after the disruptions to Urals flows were compounded by other outages in the North Sea. The spread rose to $3.26 on May 10 from less than $2.50 before the contamination crisis in late April, according to data from PVM Oil Associates.
--With assistance from Javier Blas, Alaric Nightingale and John Deane. To contact the reporters on this story: Sherry Su in London at lsu23@bloomberg.net; Serene Cheong in Singapore at scheong20@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaric Nightingale at anightingal1@bloomberg.net Brian Wingfield, Andrew Janes
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