Flotilla of Oil Tankers Flock To The Seas To Act As Temporary Storage

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  • Tankers everywhere are acting as temporary storage capacity.
  • A small flotilla of tankers full of crude is idling near the busy shipping lanes.
  • They are a potential source of oil price volatility for months to come.
  • The reasons for most of this expensive excess storage is obvious: the global supply glut.
  • Tankers carrying enough crude to satisfy 20% of the world’s daily consumption gathered off the California coast.
  • The eventual unloading of all of these floating supplies will have a significant bearing on the oil price.

According to an article published in Bloomberg Opinion and authored by Julian Hall, amid the oil glut, tankers everywhere are acting as temporary storage capacity. Where this crude ends up will have a big impact on the oil price.

Oil terminal storage busy

The waters off the South African oil storage terminal at Saldanha Bay are getting busy. A small flotilla of tankers full of crude is idling near the busy shipping lanes that link the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

Their presence, along with similar gatherings of ships all around the world, will be a potential source of oil price volatility for months to come, as global demand begins to recover amid the biggest production shutdown in the oil industry’s 160-year history. Ships full of crude have been forced to anchor off the coasts of the U.S., China, Europe, and elsewhere, as refiners have cut back processing and onshore storage tanks have been filled to near capacity. All over the world, tankers are being used to store oil instead.

The reasons for most of this expensive excess storage is obvious: the global supply glut. But there’s something else at play here too as some of the world’s smartest oil traders have filled up tankers to take advantage once crude prices start motoring again. Refining CrashOutside of hurricane-related disruptions, U.S. refinery runs is the lowest in almost 30 years.

The floating supplies of oil are vast

Tankers carrying enough crude to satisfy 20% of the world’s daily consumption gathered off California’s coast in April with nowhere to go. Most are still there. At Durban, 800 miles to the east of Saldanha Bay, six giant Suezmax tankers, each holding about 1 million barrels of crude, have been anchored for up to six weeks.

 

More tankers have amassed off Africa’s northwest corner, around the entrance to the Mediterranean Sea, after processors in Spain, southern France, and Italy all cut runs or shuttered refineries.

Market Tightening

After record stock builds, the world is set to need more oil than is pumped in the second half of the year

The vessels now off Saldanha Bay began to arrive in early April, carrying crude from Nigeria, Angola and the Republic of Congo. They have been joined over the past two weeks by four more ships, each of which loaded a similar volume of crude in the U.S. Gulf Coast.

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Source: BloombergOpinion