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Iran's crude, condensate exports to tumble to 19-month low in Oct

TOKYO/SINGAPORE (Reuters) — Iran's total crude and condensate exports for October are expected to tumble by nearly a fifth from the previous month to a 19-month low, dented by production issues, a person with knowledge of the country's tanker loading schedule said.

The hiccup in output from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' No.3 producer should help the cartel tighten global supply, supporting oil prices which hit a 27-month high this week on Saudi Arabia's resolve to end a global oil glut.

Shipments of condensate have dropped due to a "technical problem" at the South Pars field, with maintenance work expected to take up to two months to complete, National Iranian Oil Company's Director of International Affairs Saeid Khoshrou told Reuters in late September.

The preliminary schedule for October shows a decline of some 800,000 bpd from a 6-yr high of nearly 2.9 MMbpd in February. Tehran had been regaining market share at a faster pace than analysts had projected since sanctions were lifted.

Crude and condensate exports for October will be 2.09 MMbpd, the lowest since March 2016, down from 2.57 MMbpd in September, the person said. The source declined to be named as the information is confidential.

The Islamic Republic was exempt from an OPEC deal to reduce output, allowing the country to regain market share after Western sanctions over its disputed nuclear program were lifted in January 2016.

Exports to Europe are set to tumble 39% to 510,000 bpd in October from a month earlier, while loadings for Asia will fall 9% to 1.47 MMbpd, according to the source. Exports to the Middle East will hold at 111,000 bpd.

However, shipments to Japan are set to jump 83% to 218,000 bpd in October from a month earlier, while shipments to top buyer China will rise 2%.

India is set to overtake South Korea as the No.2 buyer, taking 377,000 bpd, the source said. South Korean loadings are set to drop by 48 percent from a month earlier to 238,000 bpd, which sources say is partly due to refinery maintenance season.

Belarus is taking its first barrels since February.

Iran has been producing around 3.8 MMbpd over the past few months, according to a Reuters survey.

The OPEC producer aims to raise its output capacity to 4.7 MMbpd by 2021, Amir Zamaninia, Iran's deputy oil minister for trade and international affairs, said last week.

Reporting by Osamu Tsukimori in TOKYO and Florence Tan in SINGAPORE; Editing by Sonali Paul

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