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Iran oil prices drop in China due to sanctions and quota shortage

Trade sources reported on Wednesday that the discounts offered by China on Iranian oil have reached their highest level in over a year. This is because tighter sanctions against Russia and Iran are limiting purchases from independent refiners who are already restricted due to a lack of crude import quotas.

The United States of America, Britain, and the EU imposed trade restrictions recently on the top Russian oil producers, as well as other players in the industry, to put pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Sources in the trade said that sanctions had prompted some Chinese and Indian buyers to stop buying Russian crude oil. This has caused a steep decline in prices and added unsold Russian shipments to Iranian supplies already in abundance.

LOGISTICS DISRUPTED, AND BUYERS RAISED FEARS

Washington imposed sanctions on entities that it claimed were involved in Iranian oil trade. These included four Chinese refiners, ports and vessels.

The combined measures have caused logistical disruptions and increased fears of sanctions among buyers, traders reported. The traders cited a dispute between Iranian oil buyers and sellers this week.

A trader based in China said, "There is just too much product on the market and it's not moving anywhere."

Sources declined to name themselves because they were not authorized to speak with media.

Iranian Light crude offers have dropped to discounts of more than $8 a barrelle compared to the benchmark ICE Brent, for arrival in December. This compares to a discount around $6 in September, and around $3 in march.

The sources reported that bids dropped to around $10 per barrel as buyers sought to compensate for the sanctions risks, and any potential problems at Chinese ports during cargo discharge.

Kpler data revealed that imports of Iranian crude oil, which accounted for 14% of China’s crude imports in September, dropped to 1.2m barrels per day, the lowest level since May, and well below the average of 1.38m bpd this year.

China controls crude imports from independent refiners through a strict quota-based system. Market sources reported that the refiners were largely out of quotas for this year at the end of September.

Refiners will be watching next month to see if Beijing issues new quotas. It has done so in November the last few years. Reporting by Chen Aizhu in Singapore and Siyi Liu; editing by David Holmes

(source: Reuters)