Vessel: Alboran
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Three cargoes of U.S. crude are heading to China
from the U.S. Gulf Coast, trade sources said on Monday, the first
departures since late September and a 90-day pause in the two countries’
trade war that began last month.
The vessels left Galveston, Texas, last month and are scheduled to
arrive at Chinese ports between late January and early March, according
to shipbrokers and vessel tracking data. The shipments mark a change
since Chinese buyers largely began avoiding U.S. oil during the trade
dispute that flared last summer.
“It
looks like China has resumed purchasing U.S. crude,” one U.S.-based
shipbroking source said. The person, who declined to be identified
because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the matter, said
the destination data could yet change.
China is the world’s
biggest crude importer and became a top buyer of U.S. crude after
Washington lifted a 40-year ban on shipments in late 2015. It imported
325,000 barrels per day (bpd) of U.S. crude in the first nine months of
2018, customs data showed.
Beijing
has also resumed purchases of some U.S. soybeans for delivery this
year. But China’s 25 percent tariff on U.S. soybean cargoes remains in
place.
The supertanker Alboran carrying about 2 million barrels
of oil recently rounded South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope and is due to
arrive in China late this month, said brokers, citing fixture data.
The
Almi Atlas and the Manifa, two other vessels carrying 2 million barrels
of crude, are expected to reach China in late February or early March.
The two ships are currently located off Brazil, according to Refinitiv
Eikon vessel tracking data.
The
cargoes mark the first shipments of U.S. crude to China since U.S.
President Donald Trump in December said China would begin taking more
American products.
“It’s a follow through of statements by the
Chinese government they would indeed begin purchasing commodities from
the United States again,” said Reid I’Anson, an energy economist at data
provider Kpler.
As China reduced U.S. crude imports, more
American oil flowed into neighboring Asian countries, including India,
Japan, Taiwan and South Korea. U.S. exports climbed to 2.33 million bpd
in October, up from 2.2 million bpd in June.
Reporting by Collin Eaton; Editing by Richard Chang and Cynthia Osterman
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