‘India HPCL buys 2 million barrels of West African oil for early May’


India, which used to rely on Middle Eastern oil for over 45% ​of its oil imports, has been hit hard by ​the disruption caused by the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran that ⁠has halted shipments via the Strait of Hormuz.

The Oman and ​Dubai benchmarks eased on Friday, but earlier in the week surged as ​Middle Eastern crude became the world’s most expensive. Peaks earlier this week exceeded the previous record of $147.50 hit by Brent futures in 2008.

REFINERS SEEK ALTERNATIVES ​OR CUT OUTPUT

The surge in the benchmarks, used to price ​millions of barrels of Middle Eastern crude bound for Asia, has increased costs ‌for Asian refiners, leading them to seek alternatives or reduce output.

HPCL has bought a million barrels each of Clov and Cabinda from Exxon at about a $15 premium to dated Brent on a delivered ​basis for May ​1-10 arrival in ⁠India’s west coast, the sources said.

Indian companies do not comment on their crude purchases as the ​deals are confidential.

The refiner has bought oil for ​its 180,000-barrels-per-day ⁠Barmer refinery in the desert state of Rajasthan.

Earlier this week, HPCL bought a million barrels each of Forcados and Agbami from trader ⁠Totsa.

Separately, Indian ​Oil Corp, the country’s biggest refiner, ​was also seeking to buy crude, mainly from West Africa for loading in the ​second half of April.

Reporting by Nidhi Verma; editing by Barbara Lewis- Reuters



This article was originally posted at sweetcrudereports.com

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