Saudi crude exports rise to 7.72m bpd in September

  • 11/17/2022
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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports in September rose to 7.72 million barrels per day from 7.60 million bpd in August, the International Energy Forum said on Thursday, citing data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative The Kingdom saw a 1.6 percent rise in its crude oil exports from August, sustaining its more than two-year record high. JODI data indicated that September, the fourth month in a row to witness an increase, had recorded its highest volume since April 2020. Saudi Arabia’s crude oil production amounted to 11.04 million bpd in September, falling slightly from 11.1 million bpd the month before. This marked the fourth time on record that the Kingdom surpasses the 11 million bpd, the JODI data showed. On the other hand, domestic crude refinery output dropped by 0.1 million bpd to reach 2.7 million bpd, whereas its direct crude burn fell by 142,000 bpd to reach 522,000 bpd in September. The largest petroleum product imported by the Kingdom in September was fuel oil, amounting to 204,000 bpd, and the largest product exported was gas/diesel oil with a total of 692,000 bpd. The data revealed that Naphtha was the petroleum product most transferred, with 111,000 bpd of the total 405,000 bpd in September. As the global economy remains unstable, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is expected to remain cautious in its oil production policy when it meets next month, said the energy minister of OPEC’s de facto leader Saudi Arabia, Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman. Speaking to Bloomberg on the sidelines of the COP27 summit in Egypt, Prince Abdulaziz said OPEC+ must be "cautious" in its approach. He said: “It’s about being responsible and not losing sight of what the market requires." OPEC+ took a decision to decrease their headline oil production target by 2 million bpd starting November. Even though the actual reduction is to be around half the actual target, at 1.1 million bpd, it still is the largest cut since the record production cut reported in April of 2020 when oil demand plunged at the begining of the pandemic. (With inputs from Reuters)

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