Euronav Readies Tanker for 2020

1099

Leading Belgian tanker operator Euronav has started preparations to supply IMO 2020 compliant VLSFO bunkers to its vessels, reports Reuters. 

Tougher regulations 

Ship owners must cut emissions by reducing the sulfur content in fuel to 0.5% from 3.5% under the new IMO rules which will be in effect from January 2020.

To comply, ship owners can 

  • use low-sulfur fuel, 
  • opt for other, more expensive clean fuels such as liquefied natural gas, or 
  • install exhaust gas cleaning systems known as scrubbers.

Euronav’s option to comply

Euronav, one of the world’s biggest tanker players, has a fleet over 70 ships including 42 supertankers, which can each carry 2 million barrels of oil. 

The company has so far opted for low sulfur fuel.

Points to be noted before fuel switch

Ships switching to low sulfur fuel need ensure fuel tanks and related piping are cleaned of sludge and sediment that buildup with high sulfur fuel, which could also contaminate the new cleaner fuel and potentially make the vessel non-compliant.

Cleaning

In order to do this, vessels need to cleaned ahead of IMO 2020, which involves days worth of preparations for each ship.

Brian Gallagher, Euronav’s head of investor relations, said it had already completed the cleaning for some of its vessels.

He said, “We are looking to do this in a fairly quick scale over a period between now and Christmas with the least disruption as possible. We are prepared.”

Compliant fuel purchased

Euronav also owns the only two operational megatankers, which can each carry up to 3 million barrels of oil.

As part of its strategy for IMO 2020, Euronav has purchased the equivalent of 420,000 tonnes of compliant fuel and marine gasoil, which it is storing onboard one of those vessels, the Oceania, off Singapore.

Gallagher said Oceania had already started supplying ships with the new compliant fuel, adding it would take up to six months for the vessel to fully discharge.

Tightened ship availability

Crude tanker freight earnings soared to a record $300,000 a day earlier this month as ship availability tightened, prompting operators to ensure their vessels were operational to ride the rally. 

Rates have since dropped to just under $70,000 a day.

Did you subscribe to our daily newsletter?

It’s Free! Click here to Subscribe!

Source: Reuters