Murban Futures: What is a crude grade?

Light, sweet, heavy and sour: the trade in global oil is differentiated by the levels of viscosity, sulphur and density in various grades

Not all crude oil is the same. Depending on where it is produced, it will have different properties that impact how it is best used. Image: Reuters
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Contracts for the future delivery of Murban crude oil will be bought and sold on a commodities exchange in Abu Dhabi from Monday.

This oil is already in demand from customers in Asian markets, such as China, India and Japan. The trading of a Murban futures contract will put it in elite company in terms of oil price benchmarks such as Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate crude. Murban differs physically from Brent, WTI or other oil produced elsewhere in the world.

Murban and other grades

Not all crude is created equal. Oil, formed millions of years ago from the remnants of ancient marine organisms varies considerably from place to place. The trade in global oil is differentiated by the type of crude grade, which categorises oil by the levels of viscosity, sulphur and density. The different variants of oil help deliver different products and serve different purposes in the global economy. Some are easier to refine to different products, while others require additional processes.

Refineries were traditionally built to run on a specific grade of crude. Some refineries can refine several grades of crude.

Broadly, oil falls under light, sweet, heavy crude grades. We take a look at what these terms actually mean.

Light crude 

Half of Adnoc's crude production capacity is Murban. Image: Adnoc
Half of Adnoc's crude production capacity is Murban. Image: Adnoc

It is a type of crude with low density, viscosity and a low specific gravity. The crude grade also has a high API gravity, which is a measure devised by the American Petroleum Institute on how heavy a petroleum liquid is when compared with water. Light crude has a high API gravity, which means it can float on water. Light crude is favoured over other types as it can be easily converted into products that are in high demand such as gasoline. Murban, Abu Dhabi's flagship crude grade is an example of this type of oil.

Heavy crude 

Boats are moored at an oil drilling platform on Venezuela's Lake Maracaibo in this April 24, 2002 photo.   Photographer: Diego Giudice/Bloomberg News
Boats are moored at an oil drilling platform on Venezuela's Lake Maracaibo. Image: Bloomberg News

It refers to a crude grade with an API gravity less than 20, which means it cannot float on water. Heavy crudes find uses in the manufacturing of plastics, petrochemicals and road surfacing, and thus play an important role in the world economy. Venezuelan crude for instance, is heavy and is known to ooze rather than flow. The crude grade is favoured by many US refineries, who have had to scramble for alternatives following sanctions on the regime of Nicolas Maduro.

Sweet crude 

Workers perform maintenance on oil pipelines at the Sirte Oil Company in Brega, Libya. Image: Reuters
Workers perform maintenance on oil pipelines at the Sirte Oil Company in Brega, Libya. Image: Reuters

This is a type of crude, with sulphur content that is less than 0.5 per cent. It is highly favoured for its efficiency in yielding products such as gasoline, diesel and even plastics. In the Middle East, Libya, is well known for its production of light, sweet crude.

Sour crude 

A worker checks the valve of an oil pipe at Nahr Bin Umar oil field, north of Basra, Iraq December 21, 2015. Iraq has signed deals worth $1.4 billion to ship about 160,000 barrels per day of crude to two Indian refiners in 2016, sources said, upping the ante in a race among exporters to cement their market share in Asia - the world's top oil consuming region.  Picture taken December 21, 2015. REUTERS/Essam Al-Sudani
A worker checks the valve of an oil pipe at Nahr Bin Umar oil field, north of Basra, Iraq. Image: Reuters

It is a type of crude that is the least favoured by refiners worldwide as the high content of sulphur makes it difficult to refine and turn into products. North America has several sour crude grades, while Iraq and Kuwait in the Middle East also have oil with similar properties.