Low tanker rates enabling more long-distance crude oil product trade

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Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on Bloomberg and London Tanker Brokers’ Panel Note: Deadweight tons (DWT) is a measure of a vessel’s capacity to carry cargo. Barrel equivalents will vary based on the cargo’s density. AFRAMAX is not an official vessel classification on the AFRA scale. Click to enlarge ship size diagram.

Currently, no US port capable of loading larger tanker typically used to transport crude oil

Recent expansion of the global crude oil and petroleum product tanker fleet has resulted in falling or lower tanker rates for much of 2016 that have widened the geographic scope for economically attractive trade at a time when inventories of both crude oil and petroleum products are at high levels, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

In recent years, growing global oil production and growth in global refining capacity in markets distant from crude sources led to an increase in orders for new vessels in anticipation of an increasing need for tanker transportation.

This resulted in several consecutive years of an expanding global tanker fleet, with an estimated net change of 205 ships added in 2015, according to Thomson Reuters.

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Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, based on Thomson Reuters Research & Forecasts Note: Vessel sizes range from 10,000 deadweight tons to 300,000 deadweight tons. Net change is deliveries minus demolitions.

On a global scale, demand for tankers is influenced by differences in supply and demand conditions across regional markets.

Tankers of different sizes and classes have specific characteristics that help determine the markets and shipping routes they serve.

For example, so-called dirty tankers, which transport unrefined or less-refined cargos (such as crude oil and residual fuel oil), tend to be large, with low per-barrel transportation costs.

So-called clean tankers, which transport refined products such as gasoline and diesel fuel, are typically smaller vessels.

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To date in Oct., monthly average rates for very large dirty tankers in the carrier (VLCC)-size range traveling between the Arabian Gulf and Singapore, an indicator for the overall dirty tanker market, are down 23 per cent from Jan.

Rates for smaller average freight rate assessment (AFRA)-size range dirty tankers on the same route are down 49 per cent from Jan.

Rates for dirty VLCC-size range tankers and AFRA-size range tankers through Oct. have each averaged 36 per cent lower, respectively, than the full year 2015 average.

Rates for clean tankers are also lower. The average Oct. rate, to date, for a clean long range 1 (LR1)-size tanker on the Arabian Gulf-to-Japan route is down 38 per cent from Jan.

The monthly average rate for a smaller medium range (MR)-size range tanker on the same route is down 22 per cent from Jan.

With lower tanker rates, the price spread needed for economically attractive trade between two markets narrows, making it possible for importers to bring in distant supplies at reduced cost.

For exporters, lower tanker rates increase the price competiveness of their supplies in more distant markets.

This can help to explain some of the motor gasoline imports to the US East Coast in 2016 from relatively distant countries such as South Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, and Japan.

Low tanker rates also aid the competitiveness of US crude oil exports.

Currently, no US port is capable of loading the larger vessels typically used to transport crude oil, so US crude exporters must use more expensive smaller vessels.

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Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Short-Term Energy Outlook, October 2016

However, with lower tanker rates, exporters may be able to load smaller ships at US ports and transfer the cargoes onto larger vessels offshore for transport to final destinations at an attractive per-barrel cost.

This may explain US Customs data showing some crude oil exports to places like the Marshall Islands, a nation where many vessels are registered but are most likely not taking deliveries.

Going forward, tanker rates should recover as the global market slowly returns to balance. EIA’s most recent Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) forecasts a global quarterly draw in crude oil stocks in the third quarter of 2017, the first since 2013.

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