Angolan trading quickens, while India buys Akpo
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices slid on Tuesday as Saudi Arabia and Iran dashed hopes that producer nations would reach a deal to curb crude output during informal meetings in Algiers.
A helicopter crashed en route to a Chevron oil platform in Angola, killing at least four. Sources said there was not expected to be an impact on production or cargo loadings.
NIGERIA
* Shell has not declared force majeure on Bonny Light crude loadings despite the closure of the Trans Niger Pipeline due to a fire. It has not yet issued revised loading programmes.
* A cargo of end-October loading Akpo was set to sail for India after Shell won a mini tender to supply refiner IOC.
* A November Akpo programme showed four cargoes set to load.
* Qua Iboe loadings were expected to start this week, though the grade, along with Forcados, was still under force majeure.
* The Ottoman Nobility, the South Sea and the Aspen Spirit suezmax tankers were all en route to the Qua Iboe terminal.
* While some buyers were put off by the unpredictability of Qua loadings, India's HPCL has booked the Desh Vibhor to load Qua Iboe at the end of October.
ANGOLA
* Several cargoes of Angolan oil traded, including Total selling cargoes of Girassol and Dalia, Sonangol selling Dalia and Chevron selling Cabinda.
* A U.S. buyer took BP's cargo of CLOV to an unnamed buyer, which sold a day earlier.
* State oil company Sonangol was still offering three November-loading cargoes, including Saturno, Girassol and Nemba.
TENDERS
* Shell won a tender to supply India's IOC with one million barrels of Akpo.
* BPCL is expected by Wednesday to award a tender to buy crude for November loading.
* Indonesia's Pertamina was also looking to buy crude oil via tender, traders said.
(Reporting By Libby George; Editing by Susan Fenton)