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Oilfield Services Rush To Raise Capital As Oil Recovery HoldsChina's independent refiners, the so-called teapots, are importing Russia's Urals grade with the drop in the Brent/Middle East spreads as OPEC's cuts have made the Dubai and Oman crudes more expensive.

The increased Chinese imports from Russia could further boost Russia's position as China's largest crude oil supplier, after it recently overtook Saudi Arabia to top the ranking.

Russia last year overtook Saudi Arabia as China's biggest supplier of crude oil thanks in large part to increased demand the teapots. The average daily amount that Russian companies exported to China in 2016 stood at 1.05 million barrels, up by 25 percent from 2015. Saudi Arabia's average daily shipments to the world's second-largest oil consumer were 1.02 million barrels daily in the period, an amount representing a slight 0.9-percent uptick on 2015.

Now in early 2017 the drop in the Brent/Middle East crude spreads has opened the arbitrage window for Russia's Urals - which is priced against the Brent - to head to Asia.

According to Reuters sources with knowledge of trade schedules, Shandong Wonfull Petrochemical Group has bought 2 million barrels of the Urals crude grade for delivery this month and in May.

The Urals quality is good; it is also very similar to Oman, and has better refining economics, one source told Reuters. Since Oman crude has become more expensive with the OPEC cuts, teapots are replacing Oman with Urals, according to traders.

Related: Europe's Big Oil Breaks Even At $50-60 Per Barrel

Unlike China's state oil companies that are bound by long-term contracts with Saudi Arabia, the small refineries are taking advantage of Russia's exports and the narrow spread between the Brent and the Middle Eastern benchmarks Oman and Dubai.

According to trade sources quoted by Reuters, Lukoil's trading unit Litasco would be sending 1 million barrels of Urals crude, part of which it would sell to an independent refiner in China. In addition, Reuters shipping data show that Litasco and Unipec -- the trading unit of Sinopec - are expected to send two Suezmax tankers to China, loading from Novorossiisk in the middle of February.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews.  More

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