TotalEnergies sees Brent-Dubai crude price gap remaining negative, making sweet grades more attractive to Asian refiners
The price gap between Brent and Dubai crude is expected to remain negative due to strong demand for heavier Middle Eastern oil, despite increasing supplies from OPEC nations, a TotalEnergies executive said.
Rahim Azouni, TotalEnergies' senior vice president of trading and shipping, was speaking at the APPEC conference in Singapore a day after OPEC+, which includes the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries plus Russia and other allies, agreed to further raise oil production from October.
"Clearly, the market is looking for heavier grades today ... That's why we see the Brent-Dubai going negative," he said. "We see this trend continuing despite OPEC adding more crude to the market," he added.
A negative spread between Brent and Dubai quotes has made sweet grades more attractive for Asian refiners relative to Middle East sour grades.
On Monday, Brent-Dubai Exchange of Futures for Swaps (EFS) narrowed 12 cents to 47 cents per barrel. The narrowed spread has also opened the arbitrage for U.S. crude to head to Asia.
"You have the WTIs landing very cheap compared with the alternative grades," Azouni said, referring to West Texas Intermediate crude.
He said TotalEnergies buys more than 10 cargoes of U.S. crude every month and trades more than 1 million barrels per day (bpd) of the oil to Asia as well as to Europe.
Looking ahead, global oil supply will be driven mainly by Latin America in 2026, he said, adding that TotalEnergies will be producing oil in Suriname in two years' time, with production to plateau at 200,000 bpd.
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