Saudi Aramco seeks to reroute crude away from Strait of Hormuz, sources say

Saudi Aramco is rerouting oil exports to the Red Sea port of Yanbu. This move aims to bypass the Strait of Hormuz, where shipping is severely impacted by attacks. The East-West Pipeline, a potential alternative, has limited capacity and faces secu...

Saudi oil giant Aramco is attempting to reroute some of its crude exports to the Red Sea to bypass the ‌Strait of Hormuz ⁠where the risk ⁠of attacks has slowed shipping to a near halt, sources said on Tuesday.

The world's largest oil firm hopes to avert production cuts by rerouting oil to its Red Sea port of Yanbu but sources, including buyers, traders and analysts, said the East-West Pipeline had limited capacity and could become a target of attacks by Iran's allies.

The pipeline has a capacity of 5 ​million barrels per day (bpd) and in 2019 was ⁠able to ‌temporarily handle 7 million bpd after natural gas liquid pipelines were ​converted to ​carry crude.


Saudi Arabia produced just over 10 million bpd of crude ⁠in January, according to OPEC secondary sources.

Aramco has informed some buyers ​of its Arab Light crude that they must load cargoes ​at Yanbu, three sources said, adding the company will assess demand and crude availability and inform the buyers.

"There are logistical trade-offs involved, including the reduction of NGLs takeaway capacity and what rate the Yanbu crude terminal on the Red Sea can sustainably load vessels at," said Richard Bronze, co-founder of consultancy Energy Aspects.
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Crude loadings at Yanbu hit ‌a peak of just under 1.5 million bpd in April 2020, Kpler data showed.

Aramco declined to comment.

It shut its largest domestic refinery ​at Ras Tanura ​on Monday, a source ⁠said, after a drone attack.

An industry source earlier told Reuters the company is reviewing all options to bypass the strait, including using the pipeline, which runs from the Abqaiq ​oilfield.
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Global oil and gas prices jumped on Tuesday as the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran impacted energy production and exports from the Middle East, with Tehran attacking ships and energy facilities, closing navigation in the Gulf and forcing production stoppages from Qatar to Iraq.
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