At least one U.S. refiner has secured fresh term supply contracts to get Mexican crude as the producer south of the border grapples with issues at its newest and older refineries, limiting their need for domestic oil production, at least for now.

These contracts are for relatively short-term supply, some for roughly three months, in contrast to the more typical 1-year term deals that Pemex normally offers. At least one of these short-term transactions is set to begin in July. These deals are for a few Aframax cargoes for loading each month and will be on top of supply from existing contracts.

It’s a walk-back from earlier this year when PMI -- Pemex’s crude oil marketing entity -- told buyers of cuts to their contractual Mexican supply that impacted April and May shipments. The country wants to keep its domestic oil output to feed its growing local refining system and hopefully end its fuel imports. For U.S. Gulf refiners, this is welcome news, as many have had to adjust to less Canadian volumes after the startup of long-awaited Trans Mountain Expansion (TMX) pipeline in May. The Canadian government-owned pipe is designed to move western Canadian heavy oil barrels to markets on the Pacific Coast.

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