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Chinese refiner ZPC reduces runs by 20% due to Iran war tightening crude supply

Chinese refiner ZPC reduces runs by 20% due to Iran war tightening crude supply
Chinese refiner ZPC reduces runs by 20% due to Iran war tightening crude supply

Zhejiang Petrochemical Corp, ?a major Chinese refiner backed ?by Saudi Aramco, is shutting a ?200,000-barrel-per-day ?crude unit as it brings forward maintenance at a time when the Middle East conflict is tightening crude oil supply, it said on Tuesday.

A company representative said that the month-long March overhaul will reduce throughput by 20%. The refinery, which is designed to process 800,000. barrels per day and is one of China’s largest, ran?over its nameplate capacity during February, according to sources.

The U.S. and Israeli war against Iran has cut all shipping?into the Strait of Hormuz. This is a conduit that supplies 20% of world oil.

Sources in the industry said that China, the world's largest oil importer, sources roughly half of its crude oil from the Middle East. The tightening supply, which is driving up oil prices, will likely encourage other refiners to reduce their production.

The ZPC official stated, "We planned to overhaul the system around March and April. Now we are bringing it forward in the current conditions."

ZPC, a privately-owned company in China, has a 20 year supply agreement with Saudi Aramco to provide 480,000 barrels per day of crude oil. It operates four crude production units capable of producing 200,000 barrels per day in Zhoushan.

Aramco holds a 10% stake of Rongsheng Petrochemical, ZPC’s largest shareholder.

ZPC, a Chinese oil company, is a major buyer of Canadian oil.

Tanker tracker Vortexa estimates that the Middle East accounts for 75 to 80%?of its total purchases.

Industry and trade sources claim that ZPC, unlike many independent Chinese refiners has stayed away from Western-sanctioned Russian, Iranian and Venezuelan supplies.

Sun Jianan, an Energy Aspects analyst who wrote in a Monday note that some Chinese refineries heavily dependent on Middle East supplies could reduce?crude run by up to 20%.

Sun reported that "Chinese refineries will likely make precautionary cuts to their production as Middle East shipping is at a standstill."

Chinese independent refiners have enough oil on hand to weather the near-term disruptions from the Iran conflict. This is bolstered recently by record purchases of Iranian crude and Russian crude, and robust government stocks, according to traders. Reporting by Trixie YAP, Chen Aizhu and Siyi Liu. Editing by Tony Munroe Raju Gopalakrishnan, Clarence Fernandez.

(source: Reuters)