The recent spate of attacks on commercial vessels by
Yemen-based Houthi rebels have not impacted flow of Russian crude through the
Suez Canal-Red Sea route, even as a number of global shipping lines and oil
companies are now avoiding the important global trade artery. Tankers carrying Russian crude have not
rerouted, and even the fresh cargoes leaving Russian ports are sticking to the
Red Sea route to reach Asia, instead of going all the way around Africa via the
Cape of Good Hope, as per data from commodity market analytics firm Kpler.
Russian oil cargoes departing from the North Sea and
Black Sea ports take the Suez Canal-Red Sea route to reach Asia, specifically
India and China, which are currently the biggest buyers of Russian crude. Oil
and shipping analysts do not foresee tankers carrying Russian oil coming under
attack in the region as Russia is perceived as Iran’s ally. The Houthi rebels
are widely believed to be backed by Tehran.
“So far, it appears to be clear that Russian cargoes
have a kind of safe passage through the Red Sea. They have been largely immune
to the crisis and given the equation between Iran and Russia, it is likely to
stay that way. It would be a surprise if the Houthis go after Russian oil
passing through the region,†an oil market analyst said on condition of
anonymity.
Data on India’s December crude oil imports
corroborates the lack of impact of the Red Sea crisis on Russian oil flows…Prior
to December, the Suez Canal and the Red Sea accounted for around 10 per cent of
global crude oil flows and 14 per cent of petroleum product flows. But as a
number of major shipping companies are now avoiding the route, choosing instead
to go around the African continent via the Cape of Good Hope, the share of global oil and petroleum
product flows passing through the Suez Canal has dropped significantly. Russian
crude, however, stands out as an exception.
“Crude oil transits through the Suez Canal were 1.86
million bpd (barrels per day) in December, the lowest number since January
2022, which was also the last month before the start of the
Russia-Ukraine conflict. Before that, Russian oil sailing to India was a rare
phenomenon,†said Viktor Katona, Kpler’s Lead Crude Analyst. He added that
Russian oil cargoes are accounting for nearly half of the crude oil transiting
through the Suez Canal.
In the aftermath of the war in Ukraine, as Western
sanctions on Russia altered global crude oil flows, India and China emerged as
the biggest buyers of Russian crude, accounting for most of Moscow’s oil
exports. Prior to the war in Ukraine, Russia was a marginal player in India’s
oil imports. However, as the West began shunning Russian oil following Moscow’s
February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russia started offering deep discounts on
its oil to willing buyers. Indian
refiners started lapping up the discounted barrels, catapulting Russia to the
top spot on the list of India’s oil suppliers.