U.S. Sends First Crude Shipment to Saudi Arabia in Years

Devika Krishna Kumar
Thursday, August 6, 2020

The United States sent a shipment of crude to Saudi Arabia in June, data from the U.S. Census Bureau showed on Wednesday, in what appears to be the first such delivery since the U.S. ban on crude exports ended in 2015.

The United States shipped about 550,000 barrels, or 18,300 barrels per day (bpd), of crude to Saudi Arabia in June, U.S. Census data shows. The U.S. Energy Information Administration has no recorded instances of a U.S. crude shipment to Saudi Arabia.

U.S. Census data shows a miniscule 1,000-barrel shipment to Saudi Arabia in 2002. That was during the four-decade ban on exports.

The size of June's cargo is less than what would be shipped even in the smallest class of crude tankers known as Aframax vessels. Traders said it is possible the cargo was part of another shipment headed to a different country. There are no records of a crude shipment to Saudi Arabia from the United States in Refinitiv Eikon vessel tracking data.

Saudi Arabia is one of the biggest suppliers of crude to the United States. It sent about 1.2 million barrels per day of crude in May, the most in three years, the result of a short-lived oil price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia that erupted just as the coronavirus pandemic was worsening worldwide.

That created a major supply glut, which the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, led by Saudi Arabia, and allies agreed to deal with by cutting output by 9.7 million bpd. OPEC oil output rose by more than 1 million bpd in July as Saudi Arabia and other Gulf members ended voluntary additional supply curbs on top of that deal.

U.S. crude exports have surged since Washington lifted a ban in 2015, averaging 2.75 million bpd in June. 

(Reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar in New York Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Categories: Middle East North America USA Saudi Arabia Crude Carriers

Related Stories

Oil Jumps 3% on Renewed US-Iran Conflict

Hormuz Standoff Risks Chronic Instability for Gulf Oil Flows

Oil Climbs on US-Iran Deal Uncertainty

Saudi Arabia Eyes Oil Pipeline Expansion to Red Sea

Israel Steps Up Mediterranean Gas Search

SLB to Support Kuwait Oil's AI and Digital Tech Initiative

Oil Holds Steady After US, Iran Agree to Cease Attacks

Markets: Oil Majors Reload Exploration Hoppers Across Sub-Saharan Africa

Aramco Explores Asset Sales in Multi-Billion Dollar Fundraising Push

IEA Expects Gradual Hormuz Recovery, Oversupplied Market in 2027

Current News

Tetragon Energy Advances Oil and Gas Exploration Activities off Philippines

Arabian Drilling Set to Resume Ops with Three Offshore Rigs

Oil Jumps 3% on Renewed US-Iran Conflict

Hormuz Traffic Falls to Five-Week Low as Tensions Escalate

Eni Enlists OneSubsea for Deepwater Umbilical Supply off Indonesia

EnQuest Clears Key Hurdle for $833M Malaysia Offshore Deal

ONGC Plans Major New Indian Oil Reserve

LNG Tankers Resume Hormuz Crossings Amid Tensions

Hormuz Standoff Risks Chronic Instability for Gulf Oil Flows

From Fixtures to Values: Where the Jackup Recovery Is Already Being Priced

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com