A number of African countries, including Angola and South
Sudan, are fast becoming preferred exporters of crude oil to Asian countries,
especially China. Before now, Nigeria was a dominant exporter of oil to this
market.
Weakness in global oil benchmark Brent has prompted China to
buy more crude from Africa, and the country’s imports from Africa are expected
to jump to 6.51 million tonnes (47.5 million barrels) in July, up about 41 per
cent from June, according to data recently compiled by Thomson Reuters Oil
Research and Forecasts.
The bulk of the increase will come from Angola, which is now
China’s top supplier in Africa. Angola is expected to ship 3.4 million tonnes
in July, up from 2.88 million in June.
South Sudan, with eight vessels exported to China in July
for a total 767,000 tonnes, it is said to have received an increase of eight
per cent from June.
For the Angolans, the large boost in July exports to China
will be a welcome change, as they lost their number two spot behind Saudi
Arabia in the first six months of 2015 to Russia, according to Chinese customs
data.
Imports from Russia were 19.401 million tonnes, a leap of
26.6 percent, while Saudi Arabia boosted shipments to 26.386 million tonnes, a
gain of 9.2 per cent.
In March 2015, India, which recently replaced the United
States as Nigeria’s biggest oil market, cut its import of the country’s crude
by 38 per cent in December, while China did not import a barrel from the
country in the period, data from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation for
the period revealed.

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