The volume will mostly be from KMG's share in the
Kara?haganak Petroleum Operating (KPO), the sources said.
The oil will be supplied to Rosneft Deutschland, which
Germany had put under a trusteeship of the German industry
regulator, the sources said. Rosneft still holds 54.17% of the
refinery.
Germany
plans to change its Energy Security Act to allow a quick sale of Rosneft's stake in the Schwedt refinery without the need for prior nationalisation, according to a draft law.
Germany stopped Russian oil imports via Druzhba from January and has been working hard to try to secure supply for Schwedt from alternative routes.
"The federal government has continuously supported the procurement of crude oil quantities ... by the shareholders of PCK and will continue to do so," a spokesman for the refinery told Reuters in a written answer.
"This also applies to the ongoing negotiations between
the oil companies concerned and the Kazakh side about additional
oil volumes from Kazakhstan, for example those of the Rosneft
Deutschland," the spokesman said.
German refineries in Schwedt and Leuna near Leipzig are supplied with non-Russian oil via Poland's Gdansk and Germany's Rostock. These seaborne supplies are not enough to provide full runs at both German oil plants linked to the Druzhba pipeline.
"According to PCK management, the refinery's capacity utilization averaged around 60 percent in January," the refinery's representative said.
Kazakhstan initially planned to start oil exports to
Germany in January 2023, but negotiations were delayed as legal
and commercial questions needed to be worked out, the sources
said.
Rosneft, Kazmunaigaz, Transneft, KPO and Kazakhstan's Energy Ministry didn't answer Reuters requests for comment. Russia's Energy Ministry declined to comment.
Eni, which owns 8.33% in PCK Schwedt, didn't immediately
answer a Reuters request for comment. Shell, which still holds
the stake in the plant, declined to comment.
(Reporting by Reuters, additional reporting by Francesca
Landini in Milan and Markus Wacket in Berlin; editing by Guy
Faulconbridge)