Japanese refiners boost US crude purchases in bid to replace Iranian supply

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe greets US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis before their meeting at Abe’s official residence on Friday. Abe could fend off demands from the US president to sign a bilateral trade agreement by offering to buy more oil. (AFP)
Updated 29 June 2018
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Japanese refiners boost US crude purchases in bid to replace Iranian supply

  • Increasing purchases by refiners such as JXTG, Japan’s biggest, are likely to please US President Donald Trump, who is pushing Japan to reduce its trade surplus with the US.
  • Nearly 4 million barrels of US crude are due to arrive in Japan, the world’s fourth biggest oil importer, between June and September.

TOKYO: Japanese refiners are ramping up purchases of US crude as it becomes cheaper relative to their usual Middle East supplies and are assessing heavy grades from US shale production as a replacement for supplies from Iran, industry sources said.

Increasing purchases by refiners such as JXTG, Japan’s biggest, are likely to please US President Donald Trump, who is pushing Japan to reduce its trade surplus with the US, which topped $63 billion in 2017.

Nearly 4 million barrels of US crude are due to arrive in Japan, the world’s fourth biggest oil importer, between June and September, according to the sources and Thomson Reuters Eikon shipping data.

They will add to about 2.4 million barrels worth 16.81 billion yen ($153 million) imported in the year through May, according to the latest statistics from the country’s Ministry of Finance.

Japan’s imports of US oil are still tiny compared with total imports of around 3.2 million barrels a day in 2017. Refiners tend to buy only when lower US demand from events such as refinery maintenance drives down US oil prices.

Japan imported an 18-year high of 10.3 million barrels of US crude in 2017, but imports slowed sharply in the first five months of this year as US spot crude prices were stronger than Middle East benchmark Dubai. A steep rise in US output has since widened the price gap between the two benchmarks to more than $5 a barrel, making US oil more attractive.

At least one Japanese refiner has been assessing US Mars crude as a potential replacement for Iranian crude as the company plans to cut Iran loadings after September as US sanctions are reinstated, said a source with knowledge of the matter.

“Because of (sanctions on) Iranian crude, we are looking at US heavy crude” as a substitute, the source said, in particular grades such as Southern Green Canyon and Mars, which are similar to crude from Iran.

JXTG Holdings recently bought 2 million barrels of West Texas Intermediate crude for arrival by September, according to three industry sources.

A JXTG spokesman would not comment on individual deals but said: “US crude is one of the candidates for replacing Iran oil.”

Cosmo Energy Holdings is also lifting 2 million barrels of US oil between April and July, according to shipping data and a source familiar with the matter. Cosmo declined to comment, but said it buys US crude from time to time.

Trump in May withdrew the US from a 2015 agreement that curbed Tehran’s nuclear capabilities and ordered the reimposition of US sanctions against Tehran.
On Tuesday, a senior State Department official said the US wants to stop all exports of Iranian oil from November and is unlikely to offer any exemptions as it did during previous sanctions.

Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has also been trying to fend off demands from the US president to sign a bilateral trade agreement by offering to buy more American products.

“Prime Minister Abe will probably try to accommodate President Trump as much as possible on the trade imbalance and buying crude oil is a no-brainer as long as the economics work,” from Tony Nunan, senior oil risk manager at Mitsubishi Corp. in Tokyo.

“To replace Iranian oil it makes sense to go for a sour grade such as Mars and Green Canyon. The problem is these grades are also needed in the US and it is the very light sweet grades that are in excess,” Nunan said.

This meant supplies of the heavier grades would likely only be available when US demand dropped, during refinery maintenance periods for example.
Japan ramped up purchases of Iranian crude after the end of sanctions.


As world fractures, experts weigh in on the politics of AI at WGS

Updated 26 sec ago
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As world fractures, experts weigh in on the politics of AI at WGS

  • e& group CEO Hatem Dowidar said there was increasing pressure to choose between the Chinese and US ecosystems

DUBAI: Across three days of rigorous debate at the World Government Summit in Dubai, experts from some of the world’s largest tech and telecommunication companies debated what the future political landscape of artificial intelligence development would be.

Speaking at the summit on Thursday, e& group CEO Hatem Dowidar said there was increasing pressure to choose between the Chinese and US ecosystems, which could have impacts on the sovereign capabilities of countries, like Gulf Cooperation Council member states, which thus far have stayed in the middle.

“I think the fracture and the pressure today is if you use this technology, you cannot use the other. You must separate them completely and this is something that never happened before,” Dowidar said.

He warned that whilst people around the world currently have access to both the leading large language models in the US and China, ChatGPT and Deepseek, this would not always be the case, and middle powers would need to develop their own capability to maintain their sovereignty.

“Europe is trying to find its own way as well, because Europe — having been caught now in the middle — they don’t have platforms, they don’t have the data center capability,” he said.

“So now, Europe is focusing a lot on building sovereign capability, sovereign data centers to run AI applications within Europe.”

Dowidar said the GCC had been ahead of the curve in this regard, having worked out early on that sovereign capability would be necessary in the new multipolar world and subsequently investing heavily in local infrastructure and capability.

“We were lucky here in the region that already — I would say a couple of years ago —we have kind of ironed out how this works,” he said.

“I think that everyone will try to see how they can either utilize the global platforms in a sovereign manner, or they end up trying to push to develop their own platforms.” 

This sentiment was echoed by Chamath Palihapitiya, the founder and managing partner of Social Capital, who said that China’s dedication to open-source models — whose code is released under a license granting users rights to view, study, modify, and redistribute it freely — could make Chinese AI more popular in the long run for nations looking to keep some level of sovereignty.

“I do think that there are a handful of American open-source models that are quite good. I think Nvidia’s models are excellent. But in fairness, the Chinese open-source models are just superb,” he told the summit on Wednesday.

“It’s going to be important for every country to make their own decisions about their own sovereignty, and in that realm, I think the open-source models provide the clearest path, because it just gives you total transparency to what’s happening underneath the hood.”

This was reiterated by Joseph Tsai, the chairman and co-founder of Alibaba Group, who said Chinese open-source systems would be favored by middle powers — but warned they had yet to find a way to be economically self-sufficient. 

“Because countries care about the sovereignty aspect and care about their data privacy, you can take an open-source model and deploy it on your own infrastructure … giving you ownership and control” he said.

“But it remains to be seen how economically all the model companies are going to make it sort of sustainable with an open-source approach … This is the biggest challenge for the Chinese firms.”