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Saudi Arabia Losing Its Crude Oil Crown in Asia

© AFP 2023 / STRThis photo taken on May 10, 2011 shows a worker walking by at an oil refinery of China's Sinopec, in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province
This photo taken on May 10, 2011 shows a worker walking by at an oil refinery of China's Sinopec, in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province - Sputnik International
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Amid the dismissal of Saudi oil minister Ali Naimi, Saudi Arabia is losing its crown of top crude supplier to Asia, mostly being outperformed by Russia and Iran.

“Stiffening competition from countries such as Russia and Iran is threatening Saudi Arabia’s longtime hold over markets including China, Japan and India,” says the Wall Street Journal’s analysis of the issue.

Khaled al Otaiby, an official of the Saudi oil company Aramco watches progress at a rig at the al-Howta oil field. - Sputnik International
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The Asian region’s biggest oil importer, China, has increased its oil imports from Russia, which now account for 13% of its total oil imports in the first quarter of 2016, as comparted to 10.6% in the same period the previous year.

Its oil imports from Saudi Arabia, on the contrary, have fallen to 15% from 15.9% last year.

Demand for Russian oil has been growing from independent Chinese refiners — known as ‘teapots.’ The government allowed them to start importing crude oil in the second half of last year, part of Beijing's efforts to boost private investment and competition in oil refining which is dominated by state-run groups.

Russian suppliers are trying to make it more attractive to deal with them, the newspaper says citing as an example the decision of Russian State-owned Gazprom Neft to trade with Chinese customers in the yuan rather than the dollar.

The Saudis are also losing out in Japan, where they supplied 33.7% of oil imports in March this year, down from 37.6% in the same month last year, while Russia’s share grew by 1 percentage point to 7.6% according to data released by the government.

Workers repair pipes at the Yanlian Oil Refinery in Yan'an, 25 May 2005, north of Xian in western China's Shaanxi province - Sputnik International
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Saudis 'Bite Back' at Russia in the Rush for China’s Oil Market
There is yet another potentially risky market for Saudi Arabia, and that is India.

“This year, Russian state-controlled oil giant OAO Rosneft plans to start sending regular deliveries of crude to India’s second largest oil refinery.

That follows Rosneft’s decision to buy a big stake in India’s Essar Oil, which owns the refinery and a network of about 2,000 gas stations. The purchase is set to be completed this year,” the newspaper says.

Another Saudi key rival in Asia is Iran.

“Iran is definitely a threat to Saudi Arabia, in particular in the Asian market,” Gao Jian, a Shandong-based oil analyst with SCI International told the newspaper. 

The above statement is confirmed by data released by the government.

In South Korea, Iran’s share of imported oil more than doubled to 8.6% year-to-date, compared with all of 2015, while Saudi Arabia’s market share declined. Iran has also boosted its market share in India

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