Oil Market's "Great Uncertainty": 15% of Global Supply Under Sanctions, 1.4 Billion Barrels Adrift at Sea

Deep News
Dec 11

Unprecedented surplus inventories of crude oil are accumulating at sea, yet the oil market has shown sluggish response to this supply surge. The core issue lies in investors' difficulty in determining whether sanctioned Russian and Iranian crude should still be counted as effective supply.

According to oil analytics firm Vortexa, there are currently 1.4 billion barrels of crude oil "adrift at sea," representing a 24% increase compared to the 2016-2024 average for the same period. These barrels are either en route to discharge ports or yet to find buyers.

Kpler data shows 15% of global oil supply is currently under sanctions. With traditional buyers like India exercising caution in purchases, the market faces the dilemma of whether to exclude these sanctioned barrels from available supply estimates.

This uncertainty may explain why Brent crude prices have remained relatively stable between $61-$66 per barrel over the past two months despite swelling offshore inventories. Analysts suggest any signs of this offshore surplus moving onshore could trigger significant price declines.

Multiple factors are driving the offshore inventory surge: 1. OPEC+ is gradually unwinding production cuts while non-OPEC exporters like Brazil, Guyana and the US increase supply. Vortexa data shows a 16% year-on-year increase in crude from mainstream producers. 2. More significantly, crude from sanctioned nations has surged 82% year-on-year over the past three months, with Russian, Iranian and Venezuelan "shadow market" barrels accumulating at sea.

India, typically a major buyer of Russian oil, has grown cautious since US sanctions targeted Lukoil and Rosneft last October. While sanctions haven't stopped Iran or Russia from producing crude, finding buyers has become increasingly difficult, leaving numerous tankers stranded offshore.

The sanctioned crude presents a market conundrum: - These barrels represent too large a portion of global oil flows to ignore - Yet with regular buyers pausing purchases, some argue they should be excluded from available supply estimates

Historical precedent shows Russian oil eventually found buyers after previous sanctions, though establishing new shadow supply chains took months. Russian President Putin recently told New Delhi he's prepared to provide "uninterrupted" fuel supplies to India.

Should Russia successfully resume Indian shipments through new non-sanctioned entities or ship-to-ship transfers masking origins, demand for replacement barrels from non-sanctioned producers would decline, potentially pressuring Brent prices.

Analysts conclude sanctions are making market direction exceptionally difficult to predict, resulting in unusual price stability despite growing oversupply. However, any movement of offshore surpluses onshore could trigger sharp price corrections.

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