India receives first ever shipment of US crude oil
MaryKay Carlson, Charge d'Affaires at the US Embassy, termed the oil imports as a significant milestone in the growing partnership between the US and India.
India received the first ever shipment of US crude oil with state-owned Indian Oil Corp (IOC) importing a 1.6 million barrels parcel at Paradip in Odisha. MT New Prosperity, a very large crude carrier (VLCC), with a capacity to haul two million barrels of crude, left US Gulf Coast on August 19 and arrived at Paradip port.
"IOC will process the crude at its refineries located at Paradip, Haldia (in West Bengal), Barauni (in Bihar) and Bongaigaon (in Assam)," the company said in a statement.
A function was held at the Paradip port to mark the arrival, which was attended by officials of IOC, oil ministry and the US Embassy.
"IOC, which became the first Indian public sector refiner to source US crude, has placed a cumulative order 3.9 million barrel (of US crude)," it said.
State-owned Bharat Petroleum Corp Ltd (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd (HPCL) have also placed orders for about 2.95 million barrels and 1 million barrels of US crude respectively for their Kochi and Vizag refineries.
"The total volume of the crude presently contracted by Indian public sector refineries is, therefore, 7.85 million barrels," the statement said.
This is one of the first shipments to India since the United States stopped oil exports in 1975, and follows recent commitments to US oil purchases by Indian state refiners, a separate statement issued by US Embassy said.
"US crude oil shipments to India have the potential to boost bilateral trade by up to $2 billion," the Embassy statement said.
Indian
companies,
both
public
and
private,
have
invested
about
$5
billion
in
US
shale
assets.
They
have
also
contracted
5.8
million
tonnes
per
annum
of
liquefied
natural
gas
(LNG)
from
the
US
and
the
first
shipment
is
expected
to
be
delivered
to
India
in
January
2018.
The
Indian
government
has
encouraged
state-controlled
refiners
to
buy
US
and
Canadian
crude
from
the
US
Gulf
coast
as
it
looks
at
cheaper
alternatives
that
have
emerged
due
to
global
supply
glut.
While in the first purchase IOC is importing 1.6 million barrels of high sulphur crude Mars from the US and 400,000 barrels of Western Canadian Select oil, in the second it has bought 1.9 million barrels of US crude, half of it being shale oil. The second shipment is expected in a months time.
India, the world's third-largest oil importer, joins Asian countries like South Korea, Japan and China to buy US crude after production cuts by oil cartel OPEC drove up prices of Middle East heavy-sour crude, or grades with a high sulphur content.
Buying US crude has become attractive for Indian refiners after the differential between Brent (the benchmark crude or marker crude that serves as a reference price for buyers in western world) and Dubai (which serves as a benchmark for countries in the east) has narrowed.
Even after including the shipping cost, buying US crude is cost competitive to Indian refiners, an industry official said.
The IOC deal cames within weeks of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's June-end visit to the US when President Donald Trump talked of his country looking to export more energy products to India.
MaryKay Carlson, Charge d'Affaires at the US Embassy, termed the oil imports as a significant milestone in the growing partnership between the US and India.
"The United States and India are elevating our cooperation in the field of energy, including plans for cleaner fossil fuels, renewables, nuclear, and cutting edge storage and energy efficiency technologies. We look forward to working together on further sales of US crude and exploring opportunities to expand the role of natural gas in India," Carlson said.
OneIndia News