The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Record US oil exports propel supertanke­r rates

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LONDON: Giant supertanke­rs that haul crude oil across the globe are making the most money in more than two years, buoyed by swelling shipments from the United States and the Middle East.

Benchmark earnings for very large crude carriers neared US$40,000 (RM178,760) a day on Wednesday to hit the highest level since June 2020.

Assessment­s in the industry-standard Worldscale system have jumped almost 40% in a little over a week. Shipowners said the spike was due to an uptick in loadings from the Middle East and the US Gulf.

While demand for tankers collapsed when producers cut output early in the pandemic, record US crude exports and a ramp-up in flows from the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries are once again boosting volumes of oil at sea. In addition, redirectio­n of Russian crude flows has upended trade routes and lengthened journeys, further stretching the global fleet.

“We now see frenetic activity in all key basins and rates are moving up quickly,” said Lars Barstad, chief executive officer of Frontline Management AS, which runs the ships of one of the world’s largest tanker companies.

“Global oil supply has reached a pivotal point with US production and healthy Saudi volumes,” while the rerouting of Russian flows is also boosting the distances ships are covering, according to Barstad.

Several other oil tanker sectors have turned steadily more bullish in recent months.

Refined product vessels are seeing their strongest market since at least 1997, while smaller crude oil tanker rates have strengthen­ed as a side-effect of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

While US exports have been volatile, they touched a record last week at five million barrels a day, according to Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion data. — Bloomberg

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