Commercial teams compare stream stability, recurring export cadence, destination markets and substitution value versus nearby grades. Origin knowledge matters because a named grade is bought together with its route to market, terminal logic and benchmark linkage.
Refinery interest depends on sulfur load, hydrogen balance, residue handling, diesel yield and marine fuel strategy. Buyers rarely read a grade in isolation; they read it inside a wider crude basket and against freight-adjusted alternatives.
A terminal system shapes title transfer, parcel formation, loading windows, draft restrictions, tank availability, inspection routines and freight optionality. Traders therefore evaluate terminals not as background logistics, but as part of the commercial identity of the barrel.