A flood of $25-a-barrel Saudi Arabian oil is headed for Europe
Saudi Arabia is offering its flagship Arab Light crude into Rotterdam for roughly $25 a barrel.

Saudi Arabia is unleashing a wave of crude toward Europe, traditionally the backyard for Russian oil sales, pledging to supply regional refineries with as much as triple their usual intake from the kingdom.
The Saudi shipments, coupled with unprecedented discounts, are turning the European oil market into the most bitterly fought corner of an increasingly acrimonious oil price battle between Riyadh and Moscow.
Saudi Arabia is offering its flagship Arab Light crude into Rotterdam for roughly $25 a barrel, a massive discount to the price of Russia’s Urals.
European refiners including Royal Dutch Shell Plc, BP Plc, Total SA, OMV AG, Repsol SA and Cepsa SA have all received crude allocations from state-owned Saudi Aramco significantly above their normal levels, according to people familiar with their operations. The range of extra supplies was between 25% and 200%, depending of the company, the same people said.

The Saudi discounts are so big that Arab Light will “push out” Urals and other crude streams “from regional refiners’ diet” unless their relative price also falls, Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at consultant Energy Aspects Ltd. said in a note to clients.
The increase in volumes, known in the industry as nominations, was confirmed by Aramco to the European oil companies on Wednesday, the same people said, asking not to be named discussing private information.
All the companies either declined to comment or didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Urals Hit
The supply hike -- more than 25% higher than last month’s production -- put Aramco above its maximum sustainable capacity, indicating that the kingdom is even tapping its strategic inventories to dump as much crude on the market as quickly as possible.
Over the weekend, Aramco cut its official selling prices by the biggest amount in more than three decades. The company made its biggest cuts for buyers in northwest Europe. An $8 a barrel reduction in most grades amounts to a direct challenge to Russia, which sells a large chunk of its flagship Urals crude in the same region. Aramco will sell Arab Light at an unprecedented $10.25 a barrel discount to Brent in Europe.
Discounts for Russian crude immediately ballooned. Vitol Group and Trafigura Group Ltd. failed to find buyers on Monday when they offered to sell Urals crude at the deepest discounts to a regional benchmark in almost two months.
“The latest Saudi OSPs had a strong hint of having been set with a political rather than technical strategy in mind,” said JBC Energy GmbH, a consultant based in Vienna.
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