Iran becomes No. 2 oil supplier to S. Korea in Q1 2017
SEOUL (Reuters) -- Iran ranked as South Korea's second-biggest oil exporter over the first three months of 2017 as it ramped up output to regain market share after sanctions were lifted last year, the first time ever it has claimed the No. 2 spot on a quarterly basis.
South Korea's March imports from Iran more than doubled from a year ago to a record 18.54 MMbbl, or 597,935 bpd, data from state-run Korea National Oil Corp (KNOC) showed on Monday.
For the January–March period of 2017, Iran seized the No. 2 spot with shipments of 46.73 MMbbl, also more than double from the same period last year and the highest on record for a quarter.
"South Korea couldn't bring crude from Iran for a while because of sanctions though it used a lot of Iranian crude in the past. But now as the sanctions are lifted ... crude from Iran will keep flowing," Kim Jae-kyung, research fellow at state-run Korea Energy Economics Institute, said on Tuesday.
This year's surge in Iranian crude also came after Tehran was exempted from production cuts led by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to clear a global glut.
Iran's jump to the No. 2 spot is due as well to solid condensate demand from South Korean refiners such as SK Energy and Hyundai Oilbank.
In the first quarter of 2016, Iran was South Korea's fifth-biggest oil supplier behind Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait and Qatar, according to KNOC data.
Saudi Arabia held onto its spot as South Korea's top oil supplier for both March and the full quarter.
Shipments from Saudi Arabia rose 10.8% in March from a year ago to nearly 26 MMbbl, or 838,387 bpd, from 23.46 MMbbl last year.
In the first quarter, the world's top oil exporter shipped 77.12 MMbbl of crude to South Korea, up 4.4% from about 74 MMbbl in the same period of 2016, according to the data.
Overall, South Korea's March imports increased 11.7% from a year ago to 95.9 MMbbl, or 3.09 MMbpd, the data showed.
The world's fifth-largest crude importer brought in 278.18 MMbbl of crude in the first three months of 2017, up 4.9% from 265.3 MMbbl last year.
Reporting by Jane Chung; Editing by Tom Hogue
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