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Tanker Market Monitor: Rising U.S. pressure on Russian oil buyers is prompting China and India to reduce imports and div

Monday, 21 July 2025 | 00:00
Indian import volumes show a more modest decline: quarterly volumes were nearly flat versus Q1 2025 and down roughly 12% year-over-year, though monthly data reveals a steady drop since March, with June shipments falling over 10 million barrels.

It’s important to understand that Russia’s crude oil remains legally accessible in Asia. While the European Union and United Kingdom have unilaterally reduced the G7 price cap to $47.60/bbl, the United States has resisted endorsing the change, limiting the global enforcement power of the revised cap, especially given oil’s dollar-based trade and U.S.-controlled payment systems. Neither the U.S. nor the EU has banned crude exports to India or China. This suggests that the recent reductions in Russian crude imports by these two countries are more likely driven by market pricing than by sanctions avoidance.

As of July 18, 2025, Brent crude traded near $70/bbl, while Urals crude was priced around $58/bbl FOB, yielding a discount of approximately $12/bbl. While still meaningful, the current spread marks a widening from previous months when reduced Asian spot buying had temporarily narrowed the differential.

Several commercial and logistical factors are contributing to the reduced appeal of Russian spot crude. A larger share of Russian exports is now sold under term contracts, limiting spot availability. At the same time, higher domestic refinery runs in Russia are tightening export supply. These dynamics have gradually pushed Urals prices higher and reduced the arbitrage advantage for Asian refiners. As a result, price-sensitive buyers in India and China are likely scaling back opportunistic purchases, rather than executing any coordinated strategic shift.

This interpretation is further supported by tanker movements. In June, there was a marked return of Greek-owned tankers to Russia-linked trades, suggesting that logistical and compliance confidence has increased and that sanctions risk is being carefully managed, not avoided entirely.

Meanwhile, Brazilian crude exports to China surged above 30 million barrels in June, nearly doubling from 16 million barrels in June 2023. These volumes largely consist of heavy-sweet grades, offering similar yields to Russian Urals and complementing China’s diversification strategy. While the increase does not yet indicate a dramatic rise in tonne-miles, it suggests a more diversified supply map for China, driven primarily by seasonal demand and relative value.

This evolving pattern of longer-haul Atlantic Basin crude flows into Asia may push Europe to rely more heavily on Middle Eastern and U.S. supply. That rebalancing could impact U.S. refiners, particularly those optimized for light sweet grades, by altering feedstock availability, margins, and output strategies. At the same time, these shifts may support transatlantic clean product flows from the U.S. Gulf Coast to Europe, particularly for ULSD and, to a lesser extent, naphtha. This could increase demand for clean product tankers, especially MRs and LR1s. Meanwhile, gasoline exports are likely to remain concentrated in the Europe-to-U.S. Atlantic Coast trade.
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Source: By Maria Bertzeletou, Signal Group

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