Russian Oil Producers Stay One Step Ahead of Sanctions, Routing Oil
through India
·
China and India
Play Ball with Russia
Shippers and refiners hide origin of Russian oil, and some are getting into
the U.S. Indian Public section oil companies denied permission.
ABS Comment
Shipping
Bill for the goods diverted to another port must be amended. Further the invoice
for payment of the goods under exchange control must come from the final recipient
who is the beneficial owner.
WSJ Sotry:
Europe
just targeted Russian crude with its toughest
sanctions yet, but shippers and refiners are getting the oil
to market by obscuring its origins. Some fuels believed to be partially made from
Russian crude landed in New York and New Jersey last month.
The cargoes
were brought through the Suez Canal and across the Atlantic from Indian refineries,
which have been big buyers of Russian oil, according to shipping records,
Definitive data and analysis by Helsinki-based think tank Centre for Research on
Energy and Clean Air.
In the wake of the invasion of Ukraine and sanctions from the U.S. and the European Union, traders are working
to obscure the origins of Russian oil to keep it flowing. The oil is being concealed in blended
refined products such as gasoline, diesel and chemicals.
Oil is also being transferred between ships at sea,
a page out of the playbook used
to buy and sell sanctioned Iranian and Venezuelan oil. The transfers are happening
in the Mediterranean, off the coast of West Africa and the Black Sea, with oil then
heading toward China, India and Western Europe, according to shipping companies.
European Union leaders agreed Tuesday to impose a phased
ban on most Russian oil, eventually cutting off the Kremlin from its biggest energy
buyer. They also are expected to ban European insurers from covering ships carrying
Russian oil. But workarounds to evade sanctions are already under way and threaten
to lower the efficacy of these restrictions.
The U.S. embargo from March prohibits imports of crude, petroleum products, liquefied-natural
gas and coal from Russia, but fuels are often made from blends of different products
such as diesel.
The U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control typically
defines origin using 25% or more as a rule of thumb, according to trade lawyers.
It excludes goods that have been substantially transformed into another foreign-made
product. Whether refining crude oil into products like gasoline or diesel counts
for this exclusion hasn’t been made clear by OFAC, according to lawyers at three
different firms.
Overall, Russian oil exports rebounded in April, after
dropping in March as the first Western sanctions took effect, the International
Energy Agency said. Russia’s oil exports rose by 620,000 barrels to 8.1 million
barrels a day, close to its prewar levels, with the biggest increase going to India.
India has emerged as
a key hub for Russian oil flows. The country’s imports have skyrocketed to 800,000
barrels a day since the war began, compared with 30,000 barrels a day previously,
according to commodity-markets data company Kpler.
That is likely because of the deep discount—a popular
grade of Russian crude known as Urals is priced at around $35 below Brent. It previously
traded largely in line with the benchmark.
A refinery owned by Indian energy giant Reliance Industries Ltd. bought
seven times more Russian crude in May, compared with prewar levels, making up a
fifth of its total intake, according to Kpler.
Reliance chartered an oil tanker to carry a cargo of
alkylate, a gasoline component, departing from the nearby Sikka
port on April 21 without a planned destination. Three days later, it updated its
records with a U.S. port and sailed over, discharging its cargo on May 22 in New
York.
“What likely happened was Reliance took on a discounted
cargo of Russian crude, refined it and then sold the product on the short-term market
where it found a U.S. buyer,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, lead
analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air. The organization is
tracking Russian fossil fuel exports and their role in funding the Ukraine war.
“It does look like there’s a trade where Russian crude is refined in India and then
some of it is sold to the U.S.”
Reliance didn’t respond to a request for comment. Its
joint chief financial officer, Srikanth Venkatachari, said in a May 6 briefing that the company has
minimized feedstock cost by sourcing “arbitrage barrels.”
Indian refined oil-product exports, beefed up by cheap
Russian supplies, have grown sharply since the beginning of the war. Daily shipments
to Europe have risen by a third and by 43% to the U.S. on a quarterly basis.
“If Indian refineries on the west coast have been importing
lots of Russian crude then yes, probably there will be some Russian crude that has
gone into the making of these products,” said Koen Wessels,
an oil-products analyst at consulting firm Energy Aspects.
This comes at a time when gasoline and diesel prices
have hit records in
the U.S. due to high crude prices, weighing on consumers at a time when inflation was
recently at a four-decade high.
Extra supply from abroad may be less scrutinized, analysts said.
Last week, the Zhen 1 ship carrying Russian crude met
the Lauren II, a giant crude carrier that can hold about 2 million barrels of oil,
off the coast of West Africa. It likely discharged its load, ship data showed. Lauren
II is heading for Gibraltar and then expected to go to China, analysts said.
It isn’t illegal for European or Asian refiners to buy
Iranian, Venezuelan and Russian oil, but these trades are crippled by related, extensive
restrictions—such as self-sanctioning banks and shipping companies—and the political
risk of dealing with these countries. So just like for Iranian oil, the best option
for Russia and its customers is increasingly to conceal its shipments.
There has also been a jump in ships carrying Russian
crude switching off their GPS equipment, known as going dark in industry parlance,
according to Israeli ship-data firm Windward. That makes
this activity even harder to track.
Chinese buyers are seeking to hide Russian oil to avoid
the high costs of transporting it, traders said. Fewer shipping and insurance companies
are willing to touch it, meaning those that still do charge prices that are three-to-five
times higher than before the invasion.
Rather than pay this all the way to China, firms including
Unipec, Chinese oil behemoth Sinopec Group’s trading arm,
are transporting labeled Russian oil short distances to a large vessel at sea and
then transferring it, traders said. Unipec didn’t respond
to a request for comment.