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19/ Sep’19

Saudi Arabia Asks Iraq For Oil

Saudi Arabia has approached Baghdad with a request to buy crude oil from OPEC’s number-two to compensate for its production outage caused by the Saturday attacks, sources who declined to be named told S&P Global Platts.

According to one of the sources, Aramco had asked Iraq’s State Oil Marketing Organization, or SOMO, for some 10 million barrels of Basra Light, to load in October and November.

The drone and cruise missile attacks on Saudi oil infrastructure removed an estimated 5.7 million bpd from its output. Although work is underway to return to normal operation at the Khurais field and the Abqaiq processing facility, it will be a while before this happens.

Saudi Arabia announced that the outage will not affect delivery volumes for next month, but it did have to resort to stockpiled crude to fill in the orders, and said there may be delays in some Asian shipments.

Saudi Arabia’s crude oil in storage was about 180 million barrels in July, which would have been enough to cover exports at the rate of 6.88 million bpd for a period of almost a month.

Now, the S&P Global Platts sources say Riyadh is also planning to use some of the oil it had allocated for domestic consumption to fulfill its export obligations. Iraq, in the meantime, has yet to respond to the request as it has its own export orders to fill.

Yesterday, Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman told media that more than half of the lost production had been restored. By the end of September, bin Salman said, Saudi Arabia would have 11 million bpd in production capacity and by the end of November, it would be 12 million bpd.

Right now, the Abqaiq plant is processing around 2 million bpd of crude, and repairs at the facility should be completed by the end of the month, Aramco’s chief executive Amin Nasser said.

Note*: News Source from oilprice.com