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First oil cargo to Asia from US emergency reserves in 3 years

The first shipment of U.S. emergency reserves oil to Asia in 2022 was crude oil from the U.S. strategic?Petroleum reserve, according to ship tracking data. Asia receives 80% of its oil through the Strait of Hormuz. This is a crucial chokepoint which has been largely closed for the past three months due to the Iran War. The Strait of Hormuz has been closed for three months, disrupting global oil supplies. Physical crude prices have reached record levels. Some importers are now looking to find new suppliers.

The Greek flagged Very Large Crude 'Carrier Arosa' loaded 616,000 barrels from the Bryan Mound Strategic Petroleum Reserve in Texas in early may and is expected to arrive in Bataan in early July. This was shown by a bill-of-lading. The vessel is chartered by Shell and co-loaded with 700,000 barrels?U.S. Thunder Horse sour. Sharon Garin, Philippines' Energy Secretary, said that the Philippines is diversifying its energy sources amid a shortage in Middle Eastern barrels. The government has also been looking at producers from the U.S.A., Canada and Colombia, as well U.S. waivers for Russian seaborne oil.

Kpler reports that the Southeast Asian nation hasn't received crude oil from the U.S.S.A. since February 2020. It gets most of its crude oil from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, as well as Iraq.

The last time the U.S. sent barrels of its "emergency reserves" to Asia was in November 2022 when the Biden administration released 180 million barrels to dampen energy shocks after Russia's invasion.

The U.S. has begun releasing 172?barrels of oil from the SPR in order to fight the rising crude prices. This is because the 'war in Iran' has disrupted global supplies and the Strait of Hormuz is largely closed. This is part of an international effort to release 400 million barrels of crude oil at a record rate.

According to data from ship tracking, U.S. SPR has already been heading to the Mediterranean, northwest Europe and the Balkans. Reporting by Georgina Mccartney in Houston Editing and rewriting by Rod Nickel

(source: Reuters)