
Pakistan to receive first US oil shipment
Pakistan's largest refiner Cnergyico will import 1 million barrels of oil from Vitol in October, its Vice Chairman Usama Qureshi told Reuters on Friday, marking the country's first-ever purchase of US crude following a landmark trade deal.
The West Texas Intermediate light crude cargo will be loaded from Houston this month and is expected to arrive in Karachi in the second half of October, Qureshi said.
"This is a test spot cargo under our umbrella term agreement with Vitol. If it is commercially viable and available, we could import at least one cargo per month," he said, adding that the shipment was not meant for resale.
The deal follows months of multiple negotiations which first began in April, he said, after US President Donald Trump threatened to impose 29% tariffs on imports from Pakistan.
Qureshi said Pakistan's finance and petroleum ministries encouraged local refineries to explore US crude imports after the April tariff announcement.
Vitol did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent outside of office hours.
On Thursday, Pakistan hailed a trade deal struck with the US, its top export market, and said the agreement would increase investments. The White House said on Thursday the US will charge a 19% tariff on imports from Pakistan.
A key China ally, Pakistan has been warming up to Trump after he threatened tariffs. It has credited US diplomatic intervention for ending recent hostilities with neighbouring India and nominated Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Oil is Pakistan's biggest import item and its shipments were valued at $11.3 billion in the year ended June 30, 2025, accounting for nearly a fifth of the country's total import bill.
The import deal will help Pakistan diversify its crude sourcing and reduce reliance on Middle Eastern suppliers, who account for nearly all of its oil imports.
"Gross refining margin is on par with Gulf grades, and no blending or refinery tweaks are required," Qureshi said.
Cnergyico can process 156,000 barrels of crude per day and operates the country's only single-point mooring terminal near Karachi, enabling it to handle large tankers unlike other refiners in Pakistan.
The company plans to install a second offshore terminal to allow larger or more frequent shipments, and to upgrade its refinery over the next five to six years, Qureshi said.
The refiner, which has been operating at an average refinery run rate of 30% to 35% due to tepid local demand, is betting on growth in demand for oil products.
"We expect run rates to rise as domestic demand strengthens and local production is prioritised over imported fuels," Qureshi said.
Trump said on Wednesday the US would also cooperate with Pakistan to develop the South Asian country's "massive oil reserves", without providing further details.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
35 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
US copper stabilizes
LONDON: US copper prices stabilised on Friday after the biggest one-day decline on record the previous day as the market continued to assess a surprise move by US President Donald Trump to exclude refined metal from 50% import tariffs. US September Comex copper futures were last up 1.6% at $4.423 per lb, or $9,751 a metric ton, after plunging by 22% on Thursday. Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.4% to $9,645 a ton by 1607 GMT as the dollar fell after US job growth slowed more than expected in July and traders ramped up bets on how many times the Federal Reserve was likely to cut rates this year. A weaker US currency makes dollar-priced metals more attractive for buyers using other currencies, while lower rates improve prospects for growth-dependent copper. Price pressure was applied by rising copper stocks in LME-registered warehouses and the risk of more inflows from massive inventories in the US after Washington excluded refined copper from its import tariffs. Copper stocks in Comex-owned warehouses are at a 21-year high of 233,977 tons after 176% growth over the March-July period. Available LME stocks, meanwhile, more than doubled in July and are at a three-month high of 127,475 tons. Limiting the prospect of massive outflows from US stocks in the short term is the Comex copper futures premium over the LME price, even with this week's price falls. 'Comex copper's premium is now only a few hundred dollars, which is still huge historically but nothing compared to the recent $3,000 premium,' one metals trader said. Trump imposed steep tariffs on exports from dozens of trading partners, including Canada, Brazil, India and Taiwan, ahead of Friday's trade deal deadline. China, the world's top metals consumer, is facing an August 12 deadline to reach a durable agreement with Washington. On the supply side, Chilean copper giant Codelco said five workers were trapped at the new Andesita unit of its flagship El Teniente mine after a 4.2 magnitude tremor on Thursday. Andesita was due to begin production in the second quarter. Among other LME metals, aluminium rose 0.2% to $2,570 a ton, lead gained 0.2% to $1,974, tin jumped 1.8% to $33,300 and nickel added 0.5% to $15,005. Zinc fell 1.1% to $2,729.


Business Recorder
35 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Oil falls on worries about OPEC+ supply
HOUSTON: Oil prices $2 a barrel on Friday because of jitters about a possible increase in production by OPEC and its allies, while a weaker-than-expected US jobs report fed worries about demand. Brent crude futures settled at $69.67 a barrel, down $2.03, or 2.83%. US West Texas Intermediate crude finished at $67.33 a barrel, down $1.93, or 2.79%. Brent finished the week with a gain near 6%, while WTI rose 6.29%. Three people familiar with discussions among OPEC members and allied producers said the group may reach an agreement as early as Sunday to boost production by 548,000 barrels per day in September. A fourth source familiar with OPEC+ talks said discussions on volume were ongoing and the hike could be smaller. The US Labor Department said the country added 73,000 jobs in July, lower than economists had forecast, raising the national unemployment rate to 4.2% from 4.1%. 'We can blame US President Donald Trump with the tariffs or we can blame the Federal Reserve for not raising interest rates,' said Phil Flynn, senior analyst with Price Futures Group.


Business Recorder
35 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Coffee, cocoa futures slip
LONDON: Coffee and cocoa futures on ICE fell on Friday as investors held out hope the Trump administration would exempt the commodities from the slew of tariffs it has imposed on dozens of trading partners. Nearly the entire US landmass is unsuitable for growing tropical commodities like coffee and cocoa. London cocoa futures were down 0.3% at 5,500 pounds a metric ton at 1200 GMT, having closed up 3.5% on Thursday. Malaysia said on Friday the US, which has slapped a 19% tariff on the country, is open to not imposing tariffs on cocoa, rubber and palm oil, though a deal is still being finalised. New York futures fell 0.5% at $8,458 a ton, having closed up 3.3% on Thursday. Arabica coffee futures fell 2.5% to $2.8850 per lb, having closed up 0.8% on Thursday. SUGAR Raw sugar fell 0.7% to 16.24 cents per lb. Sugar production in Brazil's key center-south region rose 15.07% in the first half of July when compared to the year-earlier period, industry group UNICA said. While white sugar lost 0.5% to $465.50 a ton.