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Saudi Aramco is rerouting crude oil away from the Strait of Hormuz according to sources

Sources said that Aramco, the Saudi oil giant, is rerouting some of its crude shipments to the Red Sea in order to avoid the Strait of Hormuz. The risk of attack has caused shipping to slow to a near-halt.

Sources, including traders, buyers and analysts, say that the East-West Pipeline has a 'limited capacity' and could be attacked by Iran's allies.

The pipeline can handle?5m barrels per day and was temporarily able to handle 7m bpd in 2019 after natural gas liquid pipes were converted to carry crude.

According to OPEC'secondary sources, Saudi Arabia produced a little over 10 million bpd in crude oil in January.

Three sources confirmed that Aramco had informed buyers of its Arab Light Crude to load their cargoes in Yanbu. The company would assess the demand and crude availability before informing the buyers.

Richard Bronze, cofounder of Energy Aspects, said that there are logistical tradeoffs to be made, such as the reduction in NGLs taking away capacity, and the rate at which the Yanbu crude port on the Red Sea can sustainably load ships.

Kpler data revealed that crude loadings in Yanbu reached a high of just over?1.5m bpd by April 2020.

Aramco has declined to comment.

A source confirmed that it shut down its largest domestic refinery in Ras Tanura after a drone strike.

A source in the industry said that the company is evaluating all options, including the pipeline which runs from the Abqaiq Oilfield, to bypass the Strait.

The global oil and gas price jumped Tuesday, as the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran affected?energy exports and production from the Middle East. Tehran attacked ships and a?energy facility, closed navigation in the Gulf, and forced production stops from Qatar to Iraq.

(source: Reuters)