Turkeyโs Quiet Pivot On Russian Oil Shakes Up Med Crude Trades

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Turkey has sharply cut its purchases of Russiaโs flagship Urals crude in November, trimming volumes by around 100,000 barrels per day to about 200,000 bpd, according to Kpler and LSEG data. That is a clear step down from peaks near 400,000 bpd earlier in the year. To keep refineries running, Turkey is pulling in more barrels from Kazakhstan โ mainly CPC Blend and KEBCO โ and from Iraqโs Basrah grades, which are not hit by Western sanctions. For shipowners this is a quiet but important route shift: fewer Urals barrels into Turkish ports, more Kazakh and Iraqi flows through the Bosphorus and into the wider Med, plus the risk that displaced Russian crude chases longer-haul buyers elsewhere.
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Turkeyโs crude pivot in 30 seconds
Turkey has cut its imports of Russian Urals to roughly 200,000 barrels per day and is filling the gap with more Kazakh CPC Blend and Iraqi Basrah grades. The barrels still move through the Black Sea and Turkish straits, but a bigger share now comes from origins that are easier to finance and insure under Western sanctions. For tankers this means fewer simple short haul Urals runs into Turkey and more business tied to CPC reliability, straits conditions and Gulf to Med routes.
Turkeyโs crude pivot in one glance
Turkish refiners are quietly swapping some discounted Russian barrels for Kazakh and Iraqi grades. That keeps plants supplied, reshapes Black Sea and Med routes, and widens the gap between compliant and higher risk tanker trades.
From discount hunter to slate manager
Imports move away from a heavy Urals share toward a mix of CPC Blend, KEBCO and Basrah. The aim is to keep margins while avoiding barrels that strain banking, insurance and future fuel rules.
Barrels pushed farther afield
Cutbacks from a nearby buyer mean more Urals sailing longer routes to India, China or smaller outlets, often on older tonnage with complex ownership and fewer mainstream services.
Steadier role in Med supply
CPC and Basrah barrels gain share in Turkey and the wider Med, tying refineries and shipowners more tightly to CPC uptime, straits conditions and Gulf stability.
How a Turkish refinery barrel is changing
๐ Upside levers
- More long haul barrels from the Gulf into the Med support tonne miles for Suezmax and VLCC combinations.
- CPC and Kazakh flows create repeat business for Aframaxes that are set up for Black Sea and straits routines.
- Cleaner crude slates make it easier for mainstream owners to keep insurance and bank relationships on good terms.
- Grade and route spreads open arbitrage chains for traders and fleets that can move quickly between basins.
๐ Pressure points
- Less short haul Urals trims low risk regional lift for conventional tankers in the Black Sea to Turkey corridor.
- Higher reliance on CPC and straits traffic raises exposure to weather, draft and any future security incidents.
- Shadow fleet tankers soak up a larger share of Russian flows, deepening the split in earnings and risk profiles.
- Refinery margins can be squeezed if alternative sour grades price up or face bottlenecks at key terminals.
Where stakeholders should check their exposure
Turkeyโs step away from some Urals barrels is not a shock event, but it quietly moves money, risk and opportunity around the basin. Mainstream fleets and refiners gain more compliant options in Kazakh and Iraqi grades, at the cost of greater dependence on CPC, the straits and Gulf stability, while Russian barrels slide further into long haul and shadow trades that carry different earnings and scrutiny. For owners, charterers and banks the practical task now is to map how much of their portfolio sits on each side of that divide and adjust route, risk and capital decisions accordingly.
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