Tunisia imported nearly 77,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Russian gasoil and diesel in February, compared with 20,000 bpd in January and 25,000 bpd in December last year, data from analytics firm Kpler showed.
Most of the February volumes were delivered by Russia's Lukoil and Dubai-based trader Coral Energy, the Kpler data showed. In January, Coral delivered all of Tunisia's Russian imports, the data indicated.
Russia used to be the main diesel supplier for Europe, accounting for roughly 60% of the continent's needs.
A full EU embargo on Russian oil products, which went into effect on Feb. 5, disrupted this trade massively, forcing Moscow to find new clients for its distillates and other oil products.
According to Refinitiv tracking data, Russian and Baltic diesel flows to Europe fell to a record low of 1.77 million tons in February.
Almost half of these volumes were heading to Turkey while the rest are mostly bound to locations where ship-to-ship transfers take place.
Russia has also been diverting low-sulphur diesel volumes from its Baltic ports to Morocco, Algeria, Ghana, and Brazil.
At the same time, Europe countries have been replacing Russian diesel supplies with increased imports from India, Saudi Arabia, China, Kuwait, Malaysia, among other locations.