India's
oil imports from Iran rose nearly 17 percent in February from a month earlier
as refiners received less crude from key OPEC producers Saudi Arabia and Iraq
after an OPEC deal to cut output, shipping data showed on Monday.
The
jump meant Iran replaced regional rival Iraq as India's second-biggest oil
supplier - a role Tehran used to occupy before Western sanctions were imposed
against it over the country's disputed nuclear program.
While
Saudi Arabia remained the biggest oil supplier to India, ship tracking data and
a report compiled by Thomson Reuters Oil Research and Forecasts showed imports
from Iran rose to 647,000 barrels per day (bpd) in February. That was 16.7
percent more than January, and almost trebled from February 2016.
The
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) pledged to curb
production by about 1.2 million bpd from Jan. 1, the first cut in eight years,
in a move designed to boost prices and drain a supply glut. Iran, Libya and
Nigeria were, however, granted exemptions from the deal.
In
the first 11 months of this fiscal year, between April and February, India
imported about 542,400 bpd from Iran, compared to about 225,522 bpd for the
same period a year ago. Average oil volumes supplied by Iran over this period
were the highest on record.
In
the first two months of 2017, India's oil imports from Iran averaged 598,400
bpd compared to about 192,500 bpd a year ago, the data showed.
Indian
refiners including Reliance Industries Ltd, operator of the world's biggest
refinery complex at Jamnagar, have returned as buyers of Iranian oil after
having stopped imports from Iran during the sanctions period.
Meanwhile,
India's February oil imports from Saudi Arabia and Iraq were nearly a third
lower than the same month a year ago.
Nigerian
oil supplies in February stood at 527,400 bpd, the data showed, a jump of 94
percent from the previous month. That meant the African nation emerged as the
fourth-biggest oil supplier to India, displacing Venezuela.
The
latter, witnessing a decline in production, is cutting supplies to India as it
is fulfilling obligations under oil for loan deals with China and Russia.
Source:
http://oilpro.com
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