By Arathy Somasekhar and Georgina McCartney
HOUSTON, June 1 (Reuters) - U.S. crude exports climbed to a record 5.6 million barrels per day in May as the Middle East crisis pushed up demand for the country's oil from Asian and European refiners, ship tracking estimates showed on Monday.
The U.S. and Israel's war with Iran triggered the largest-ever disruption to the global energy market with refiners globally scrambling for alternatives to Middle Eastern supply. Around a fifth of the world's oil and gas
supplies passes through the Strait of Hormuz. a key waterway that effectively closed when the war started at the end of February.
U.S. crude exports last month surged past the previous record set in April of 5.2 million bpd, according to data and analytics firm Kpler, as benchmark U.S. West Texas Intermediate prices traded at a steep discount to Brent, the global benchmark. Physical U.S. crude grades are typically priced as a differential to WTI, and a large discount to Brent makes it more economic for foreign buyers to purchase U.S. oil and ship it across the world.
WTI traded at a discount of as much as $20.69 a barrel to Brent futures in March, its widest in 13 years as supply disruptions in the Middle East led increases in Brent to outpace those in WTI. In April, when a bulk of the deals to export crude in May were executed, the spread averaged a discount of around minus $8.86, compared with an average of minus $4.85 before the war.
Exports to Europe and Asia touched record highs in May, with Asia taking 2.45 million bpd of the barrels exported, retaining its spot as the top buyer for a second month in a row. Europe was a close second at 2.4 million bpd.
Demand from Japan, which typically imports the bulk of its crude from the Middle East, accounted for the lion's share of Asian imports of U.S. grades in May, at 808,000 bpd, a 32% jump on the month and setting a record.
"It's not a surprise to see Asia pulling so much given the loss of barrels from the Mideast Gulf," said Kpler's Director of Commodity Research Matt Smith.
U.S. crude bound for the Mediterranean and Black Sea also hit a record high in May, with Bulgaria, Croatia, Turkey and Greece emerging as rare transatlantic buyers.
Italy's record imports of 335,000 meanwhile drove the uptick in European demand.
"We believe the Asian buying was mainly driven by necessity while European buying was mainly favorable shipping economics and lower transatlantic freight rates," said Rohit Rathod, a senior oil market analyst at Vortexa.
At least 283,000 bpd, or about 5% of U.S. crude exports in May, were oil barrels from the U.S. strategic petroleum reserve. The oil, part of the 172 million barrels currently being released from the country's emergency oil stash to combat spiking crude prices, headed to both European and Asian buyers.
EXPORTS SET TO WEAKEN
After a bumper May, exports are set to ease in June as hopes of a peace deal have eased some supply concerns and narrowed WTI's discount to Brent. While WTI's discount to Brent remained wide in the early part of May, it weakened in the second half and was trading around minus $6 on Monday.
Consultancy Energy Aspects estimates exports to average about 4.9 million bpd for June, and about 4.60 million bpd for July.
"We would expect exports to fall by over 1 million bpd in June compared to May," said Georgios Sakellariou, chartering analyst at Signal Maritime, adding that the company has seen at least 10 fewer Very Large Crude Carriers for June dates compared with May.
Low inventories of WTI crude in the United States will also incentivize more barrels to flow into storage domestically, sources and analysts said, cutting into exports.
Prices for top U.S. export grades - WTI Midland crude at East Houston and Mars sour crude - both weakened into July trade as demand slipped. MEH traded at a premium of $1.15 to WTI on Friday, compared with a premium as high as $7.75 in April for May delivery. Mars traded at a premium of $1.50 on Friday, compared with a high of $17.50 in April.
(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar and Georgina McCartney in Houston; Editing by Andrea Ricci )











