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Today is a day to remember the 270 people who lost their lives in what was an appalling terrorist act. Our thoughts should be with them and their families.Traders nervous as Sudan oil spat drags Saturday, 04 February 2012 00:09
KHARTOUM: Global oil traders are nervously watching a dragging dispute over compensation between Sudan and breakaway South Sudan, whose impact reaches beyond major buyer China, analysts say.
The South announced last Sunday it had nearly completed a protest shutdown of its oil production — the fledgling nation’s top revenue source — after talks in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa failed again to resolve a disagreement with Sudan over oil fees.
Khartoum admits to confiscating 1.7 million barrels of South Sudanese crude since vowing in November to take 23 percent of southern oil exports as payment in kind during the fee dispute.
The South calls this “theft.”
While Juba’s pre-shutdown daily output of about 350,000 barrels per day pales against Saudi Arabia’s more than eight million barrels, analysts say it is not insignificant.
“It’s just another factor in the geopolitical risk that’s causing the market to be nervous,” said Tony Nunan, energy risk manager at Mitsubishi Corp in Tokyo. “The price of oil is determined by the marginal barrel, so it’s important.”
Analysts say the stoppage of oil from Sudan is particularly felt in Asia. China receives 67 percent of Sudan’s crude shipments, accounting for five percent of the country’s imports.
Japan is also vulnerable as its demand for Sudan’s medium-sweet crude, burned for power generation, has risen since last year because of nuclear power outages, Deutsche Bank said in a report on Thursday.
Malaysia, India and Indonesia are the other main buyers of Sudan’s oil.
“Asian buyers already scrambling to find alternatives to Iranian oil are now faced with the prospect of having to scramble for alternatives to Sudanese oil,” the report said.
“More broadly, the loss of Sudanese crude oil further aggravates a global market already struggling to cope with multiple threats of supply disruptions in the face of low inventories and eroded Opec spare capacity.”
AFP
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