Monday, July 8, 2019

Oil Tankers Are Avoiding The Middle East’s Main Refueling Hub After Ship Attacks


Bloomberg: Oil Tankers Dodge Top Mideast Refueling Hub After Ship Attacks

Oil tanker owners are avoiding sending their ships to the Middle East’s main refueling hub after a spate of attacks on vessels in the past two months ratcheted up tensions and highlighted the growing risks of operating in the region.

Strikes on tankers just outside the Persian Gulf in mid-June were the second in a month near the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint through which about a third of global seaborne oil moves. Now demand for ship fuel at Fujairah, the United Arab Emirates coastal shipping hub close to the Strait, has waned as some tankers stay away, traders involved in the regional market said.

“Only expect issues to get worse before they get better,” said Matt Stanley, a senior broker at Star Fuels in Dubai. Fujairah is seeing “a significant drop in demand owing to war-risk premiums” that are levied by ship insurers, he said.

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WNU Editor: If I was a captain or an owner of an oil tanker, I would also definitely avoid this part of the Middle East.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Saudi's, UAE and others ought to build pipelines terminating far from Iranian sea and air spaces.

Anonymous said...

They do. One runs to Yanbu.

The Houthis hit it for the Iranians.


https://www.apnews.com/63d729241e0645539dad32f57de7bc95

https://www.mondialisation.ca/the-geopolitics-of-oil-and-gas-pipelines-in-the-middle-east/5492595

https://theodora.com/pipelines/middle_east_oil_gas_products_pipelines_map.html