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Sources say that the price of Saudi crude oil to China will fall in March, after prices reached a two-year high.

Trade sources reported on Tuesday that Saudi Arabia's crude supply to China will decline in March compared to the previous month after the kingdom raised its prices to their highest level in over two years.

A tally of Saudi Aramco's allocations to Chinese refiners revealed that the company will ship around 41 million barrels in March. This is down from 43.5 million barrels in February. This is the second consecutive month that Aramco has seen its allocation to China drop.

The sources stated that Sinopec, a joint venture between Aramco and the Chinese state-owned company, and Aramco’s joint venture Fujian Refinery, will lift less crude in March while Aramco will increase their supply to PetroChina, and private refiner Shenghong Petrochemical.

Aramco increased the crude oil prices by a large amount for March deliveries to Asia and other parts around the world.

The official selling price of flagship Arab Light crude was raised by $2.40 per barrel to $3.90 above the benchmark Oman/Dubai average. This is the highest it has been since December 2022.

The latest U.S. energy sanctions, which targeted Russian energy traders in general, disrupted Russian supplies and increased shipping costs.

OPEC+ is expected to continue production cuts during the first quarter of this year and gradually increase output from April onwards, according to delegates at the group's last-week meeting. Reporting by Siyi Liu in Singapore and Florence Tan; editing by Tom Hogue & Jamie Freed

(source: Reuters)