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India boosts purchases of West African crude as new refinery starts up

By Libby George

LONDON, Feb 29 (Reuters) -- West African crude oil flows east are expected to stay strong in March as Chinese term buying remains elevated and several additional cargoes were booked for India, according to Reuters vessel tracking and a survey of traders. 

Sixty-two cargoes have been booked so far to load West African crude for buyers in Asia, including 33 for China. The total is two cargoes above February, but lower on a bpd basis due to the shorter month.  

Exports to China are locked in at a higher level since Angola's Sonangol inked a deal with Sinochem that included as many as six cargoes per month on a term basis. 

The deal began in February, increasing the amount of West African crude sailing east under contract. 

Indian buying rebounded slightly from the 13-month low it reached on a bpd basis in February. Traders said the startup of the 300,000-bpd Paradip refinery, which started processing oil early in February, encouraged more bookings to India. 

A more favorable spread between Brent and Dubai crudes also helped make West African oil attractive to eastern spot buyers; India's Reliance booked at least two cargoes for March loading.

(Reporting by Libby George; Editing by Dale Hudson)


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