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Why South Korea’s Pledge to Buy More US Oil May Be Mission Impossible

South Korea, one of the 10 best commercial partners in America, has become one of the most prominent goals in the variable Washington tariff system. After months of rope tightening diplomacy, the United States imposed a 15 % duty on effective Korean imports on August 7-less severe than imposing a 25 % tax in the beginning, but is still painful in the fourth largest economy in Asia. On the other hand, Seoul agreed to increase investment in American projects and pledged to buy US energy products worth $ 100 billion, a deal aimed at alleviating the strike. Seoul has already estimated the effect of a potential tariff, as she expected only 0.9 % growth for 2025 (compared to 1.8 % at the beginning of this year). This would represent the weakest pace of growth since the epidemic in 2020, which confirms how weak the exports of exports in the country in the shocks of the collective tariffs.

However, the energy pledge appears to be more difficult to fulfill it in practice. Washington expects South Korea to increase a dramatically from imports of American crude, but refining refineries throughout the country have gradually turned in this direction for years. According to KPLER data, WTI Midland imports rose from 283,000 B/D in 2020 to 465,000 barrel/D in 2025, with support from favorable conditions under the Bilateral Free Trade Agreement and a freight deduction system in Korea that often makes WTI cheaper than the Middle East. However, any gradual moves from here will be restricted. Korean Korean crude imports have continued in the range of 2.8 to 3 million barrels/D over the past five years, while American sizes, Saudi Arabia and Iraq have risen, and the United Arab Emirates is still rooted in the supply mix. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia alone handed over 956,000 barrels to Korea in 2025 so far, nearly twice the quantities of any other resource, and despite the sharp decrease in Russian flows after the start of the Ukraine war, the gap has been filled quickly by Middle East producers.

What keeps these flows in place is not only the habit or political geography, but the primary design of the refining system in Korea. WTI is light raw, while very complex South Korean refineries are formed to treat heavier degrees, mostly from the Middle East. The transformation significantly towards us with barrels (and then, towards a lighter product return) will leave parts of these inactivity facilities, erosion of efficiency and profitability. Korea runs five refineries, and each shows the reason for saying diversification from doing it. The largest, Ulsan, whose fully owned by SK Energy, is already mixed with heavier degrees from Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to operate it. YEOSU, owned by Chevron, follows a similar pattern, as the increased volumes of WTI are heading with heavier Iraqi barrels. Onsan and Daisan prescriptions, partly owned by Saudi Aramco, with 63 % and 17 % shares, respectively, tend to an overwhelming majority of Arab and medium Arab light, and constitute about 80 % of their raw list. With Saudi interests directly included in the structure of its ownership, i.e. pushing to replace the resistance of American crude faces. Meanwhile, Intech, the smallest colander, struggles to work even with a capacity of 50 % and face the operational restrictions that they do not leave in a position that cannot absorb excess light oil.

2025-08-23 23:00:00

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