South Korea Nears Deal for Oil from Kazakhstan
By Reuters | 12 Apr, 2026
In its frantic quest for alternative oil supplies S. Korea has secured a deal with the UAE and expects to close Kazakhstan next week.
South Korea is close to securing crude oil supplies from Kazakhstan, the industry minister said on Sunday, as the country looks for alternative energy sources amid the war in the Middle East.
"There has been quite (some) progress, so we should be able to announce specific amounts and details early next week," Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan said in an interview with local broadcaster KBS.
Earlier this month, presidential chief of staff Kang Hoon-sik travelled with Kim to Kazakhstan to secure supplies of crude oil and naphtha amid disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
"Kazakhstan might sound very far, but it actually takes about the same time with shipments from the U.S. About 50 to 60 days," Kim said, adding that the recent visit to the central Asian country was aimed at diversifying oil supplies in the long run.
South Korea, which is almost entirely dependent on imports for its energy with 70% of oil purchases coming from the Middle East, also secured a pledge last month from the United Arab Emirates to supply 24 million barrels of crude oil.
(Reporting by Jihoon Lee; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
Recent Articles
- Trump's Lawsuit vs Wall Street Journal over Epstein Dismissed as Frivolous
- US March Existing Home Sales Fell to 9-Month Low.
- China AI PCB Maker Seeks $2.2 billion from Hong Kong IPO
- Audi Q1 Deliveries Fell 6.1% on Weak China, North America Sales
- Luxury Brands Keep Contracting on Plunging Mideast Mall Sales
- Spain Exhorts China to Take Bigger Role in Multipolar Order
- TSMC Seen Posting 4th Straight Quarter of Record Profits on Insatiable AI Demand
- US Blockade of Iran Seen Creating Major Challenges
- McDonald's to add Energy Drinks, Craft Sodas to US Menus
- Trump Attacks Pope Leo as 'Terrible' for Foreign Policy and 'Weak' on Crime
