• 1 day California’s Gasoline Crisis Was Manufactured—Now They’re Pretending to Fix It
  • 2 days Oil-Rich Alberta Forecasts Unexpected Budget Surplus
  • 2 days Iran-Based Social Media Campaign Targets Saudi Aramco
  • 2 days BYD is Cutting Production Despite Strong Sales
  • 3 days Santos Grants ADNOC Six Weeks for $19 Billion Takeover Review
  • 3 days Shell Boosts Natural Gas Production at Norway’s Ormen Lange Field
  • 3 days China's Oil Imports From Iran Hit Record High
  • 3 days Centrica Eyes Major Stake in UK Nuclear Power Project
  • 3 days Middle East Oil Disruption Risk Plunges to 4%
  • 3 days U.S. Oil Reserve Refill Pushed Back Seven Months
  • 3 days UK Scraps $34 Billion Morocco-Linked Subsea Power Cable Megaproject
  • 3 days Oil Tanker Rates Retreat as Middle East Tensions Cool
  • 3 days No Uranium Leaks After U.S.-Israeli Strikes on Iran
  • 3 days Russia Seizes Ukrainian Village Near Key Lithium Venue
  • 3 days Sudan and South Sudan Clash Over Oil Export Fees
  • 3 days Russia's Arctic LNG 2 Project Shows Signs of Life Amidst Sanctions
  • 4 days Texas Firm In Talks To Supply Iraq's First LNG Terminal
  • 4 days Shell Addresses BP Merger Speculation
  • 4 days Recent Jump in Asia’s Oil Imports May Not Mean Stronger Demand
  • 4 days Enbridge: Canada Can’t Build New Pipeline Without Legislative Changes
  • 4 days U.S. Eases Ethane Export Rules for China
  • 4 days China Launches Phase 2 Deep-Sea Gas Field Adding 4.5BCM To Supply
  • 4 days BP Stock Sees Brief Jump on Report of Merger Talks With Shell
  • 4 days Shuttered Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant Poised for 2027 Restart
  • 4 days Russia to Boost Exports of China’s Favorite Russian Crude in July
  • 4 days IEA Calls for More Investment in Ensuring Universal Energy Access
  • 5 days Judge Orders Trump Administration to Unfreeze EV Infrastructure Funds
  • 5 days April Price Crash Dragged Saudi Arabia’s Oil Revenues to 4-Year Low
  • 5 days Giant Leviathan Gas Field Offshore Israel Resumes Operations
  • 5 days China and India Cut Imports of Lower-Quality Coal From Indonesia
  • 5 days Iran-Israel War Prompts China to Reconsider Russia’s Gas Pipeline Proposal
  • 5 days EU Set to Change Subsidy Rules for Energy Costs
  • 5 days UK Must Lower Energy Costs to Achieve Net Zero
  • 5 days US Crude Oil Inventories See Another Sharp Draw  
  • 5 days Senate Parliamentarian Blocks Fast Track for Oil, Gas Projects
  • 5 days Canada’s Oil Sands Production Set for Record High in 2025
  • 5 days Former CFO of Nigeria’s State Oil Firm Arrested Over Alleged $7-Billion Fraud
  • 5 days Russia Considers AI Data Centers as Collapsing Gas Sales Create Glut
  • 6 days Alberta Exceeded Its Flaring Limit for Years Before Scrapping It
  • 6 days Alberta Expects Private Proposal for a New Oil Pipeline to B.C.
Tesla Has Big Plans in China

Tesla Has Big Plans in China

Tesla is expanding its operations…

Port Maintenance Drags Russia’s Oil Shipments Down to Three-Month Low

Maintenance works at Russia’s busiest oil ports dragged down weekly crude oil shipments to the lowest level in over three months as the ports of Primorsk on the Baltic Sea and Kozmino in the Far East halted vessel departures for four days each in the week to June 23.

Last week, Russian crude oil exports by sea fell by 660,000 barrels per day (bpd) from the previous week, to the lowest level in more than three months – 3.04 million bpd, vessel-tracking data monitored by Bloomberg showed on Tuesday.

The four-week average exports also dropped, by around 45,000 bpd to 3.37 million bpd, according to the data reported by Bloomberg’s Julian Lee.

In the previous week to June 16, before the port maintenance, Bloomberg’s data showed that Russia continued to raise its crude oil exports by sea for a second consecutive week despite promising to stick strictly to its OPEC+ output target in June.

In the four weeks to June 16, Russian crude oil shipments jumped by some 80,000 bpd to 3.42 million bpd. The week to June 16 was the second consecutive week in which the four-week average of Russia’s crude export volumes increased compared to the prior four-week average.

Russia’s crude exports hit the highest level in 11 months in the week to April 14, as export terminals likely shipped more crude that couldn’t be processed at refineries knocked offline by Ukrainian drone attacks.

Between the middle of April and the beginning of June, crude flows out of Russia’s ports were trending down, according to the data analyzed by Bloomberg.

But in June, seaborne crude exports started rising again, and the volumes have recovered about one-third of their recent decline.

This came even as Russia’s Energy Ministry pledged earlier this month that Russia would reach its oil production quota in June after exceeding its target output under the OPEC+ deal in May.  

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:



Join the discussion | Back to homepage


ADVERTISEMENT


Leave a comment

Leave a comment

EXXON Mobil -0.35
Open57.81 Trading Vol.6.96M Previous Vol.241.7B
BUY 57.15
Sell 57.00
Oilprice - The No. 1 Source for Oil & Energy News