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OPEC Beware: Asia Seen Favoring U.S. Shale Oil as Volumes Soar

OPEC should beware as U.S. shale producers are set to steal a bigger slice of the world’s biggest oil market

OPEC Beware: Asia Seen Favoring U.S. Shale Oil as Volumes Soar
A caution sign hangs from an oil pipeline at the Caelus Energy LLC Oooguruk Development Project on the North Slope in Harrison Bay, Alaska, U.S. (Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- OPEC should beware as U.S. shale producers are set to steal a bigger slice of the world’s biggest oil market and threaten the cartel’s foothold in Asia, according to a top industry consultant.

American light crude shipments to Asia will reach almost 1.3 million barrels a day in the next five years from almost nothing in 2016, according to Wood Mackenzie Ltd. This will allow Asian refiners to fill up 40 percent of additional spot demand with U.S. shale, said Sushant Gupta, the firm’s research director.

OPEC Beware: Asia Seen Favoring U.S. Shale Oil as Volumes Soar

“This is good news for Asia,” said Gupta, a Singapore-based analyst with Wood Mackenzie. “U.S. tight oil provides an alternative source to help diversify Asia’s crude slate, and complements the declining domestic crude production in Asia.”

Just about two years after lifting the ban for U.S. crude exports, oil varieties ranging from West Texas Intermediate to Thunderhorse and Mars Blend have reached Asia, making it the biggest buyer of American oil. Crude shipped overseas from the U.S. will soar to almost 4 million barrels a day by the mid-2020s, rivaling shipments from Iraq and Canada, Wood Mackenzie said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sharon Cho in Singapore at ccho28@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Pratish Narayanan at pnarayanan9@bloomberg.net, Anna Kitanaka, Alexander Kwiatkowski

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.