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Caspian Pipeline partially restores Kazakh Oil Loadings in Black Sea

It said that the Caspian Pipeline Consortium had resumed oil loading at one of the two Black Sea moorings previously closed, following a Russian Transport regulator's restrictions.

Officially, the CPC was targeted because of inspections in relation to an oil spill that occurred in December. They came after OPEC+ had

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Kazakhstan will reduce production to meet agreed-upon production quotas.

The move has sparked diplomatic activity between Russia, Kazakhstan and fueled concerns about a possible drop in oil sales from Central Asia. 80% of Kazakhstan's oil exports go through the CPC.

The court overturned the decision of the Transport Watchdog on Friday, and ruled that the CPC terminal facilities could not be suspended.

It said that the CPC, which is owned by Chevron, ExxonMobil and others, now operates at two of its three moorings.

CPC uses two moorings and keeps the third one as a back-up. The CPC said that it would provide more information about the resumption in operations of Single Point Mooring-2.

Sources familiar with CPC operations say that the consortium's operations and exports would still be affected without the third mooring.

OPEC+ ANGERING

Resuming loading will help prevent a possible fall in Kazakhstan's crude oil exports.

Two industry sources report that the initial plan for Black Sea CPC blend oil exports in April was revised downward to 1.6 millions barrels per day (6.2 million metric tonnes) from 1.7million bpd.

Sources said that the decline in loading was due to the fall in Russian oil exported via the CPC. There will also be no oil supplies from the Krasnodar oil depot, which had a major fire after a drone strike in March.

The extent of the damage to exports via CPC and its impact have been reported in conflicting ways.

After a nearby pumping station had also been attacked one month before, Alexander Novak, the Russian Vice-Premier, said that oil flow via this route had decreased by 30-40%. Kazakhstan, however, said that the flows were unaffected.

Since the beginning of Russia's conflict in Ukraine, the CPC has been in a spotlight. The damage caused by the CPC led to it closing all but one mooring point several times during 2022. This severely reduced exports along this route.

The pipeline is a main oil export route for Kazakhstan. Due to the rising production of the Tengiz oilfield, owned by Chevron, the country has breached export quotas in the OPEC+ producer groups, which include OPEC, Russia, and other countries.

Sources have said that Saudi Arabia and other members of the group are angry about Kazakhstan's increasing oil production.

OPEC+ urges the Central Asian nation, as well as other members, make further reductions to compensate for excessive production.

OPEC+ announced on Thursday that it would increase its output before the scheduled date, a sign the group had confidence non-compliant member countries would reduce their output in the coming week. (Reporting and editing by Jan Harvey, Joe Bavier and Olesya Astakhova)

(source: Reuters)