How The Marine Fuel Market is Witnessing A Structural Change?

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  • GazpromNeft Marine Bunker plans to strategise its business activities for the future.
  • The architecture of the marine fuel market has changed over the past six months.
  • Bunkering companies operate in new economic conditions.
  • LNG is emerging as an alternative to traditional oil products.
  • Gazprom Neft includes 10 bunkering vessels, 2 high-tech icebreaking support vessels.
  • 2020 had a significant impact on the sales structure and the capacity of the marine fuels market.
  • There was a decrease in demand and oil prices, which led to a decrease in prices for bunker fuel.

According to an article published in Manifold Times, Russian oil producer Gazprom Neft on 29 July shared an interview between its CEO Alexei Medvedev and Russian non-profit maritime magazine Marine Fleet.

Changes in bunker fuel

The CEO discusses how the bunker fuel landscape has changed since the dramatic events of 2020 and how GazpromNeft Marine Bunker plans to strategise its business activities for the future:

  • The first half of 2020 was marked by several challenges for the shipping and related industries at once: from January 1.
  • new environmental requirements of the international MARPOL convention came into force,
  • following oil prices,
  • the cost of marine fuels decreased,
  • and the COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on passenger and cargo transportation.

How the field has witnessed change?

Alexei Medvedev, General Director of Gazpromneft Marine Bunker, told Marine Fleet magazine how the architecture of the marine fuel market has changed over the past six months, how bunkering companies operate in new economic conditions, and how soon LNG will become an alternative to traditional oil products.

Alexey Alexandrovich, tell us about the work of the company, in which regions do you work, what were the volumes of supplies last year? What kind of fleet do you have?

Gazpromneft Marine Bunker was established in 2007 as an independent enterprise and operator of the bunkering business of Gazprom Neft. Today we are one of the three largest bunkering companies in the country. At the end of 2019, the total sales of Gazpromneft Marine Bunker marine fuels reached 3 million tonnes.

Our clients include over 200 Russian and foreign shipping companies. Thanks to the developed infrastructure, consisting of fuel terminals and our own bunkering operators, we provide our partners with a range of bunkering services in all key domestic ports – from the Baltic to the Far East, as well as abroad – in Tallinn (Estonia) and Constanta (Romania).

In addition to 10 bunkering vessels, our fleet includes vessels involved in the Arctic logistics of Gazprom Neft, including two high-tech icebreaking support vessels – Andrey Vilkitsky and Alexander Sannikov.

What products do you offer?

The company’s portfolio includes almost all types of petroleum products that are currently in demand on the market: low-sulfur with a sulfur content of less than 0.5% and ultra-low-sulfur, with a sulfur content below 0.1%, low-viscosity marine fuel.

The fuel that we sell is produced at Gazprom Neft’s refineries in Moscow and Omsk, and some of it is produced by blending at our terminal assets. The product portfolio also includes dark oil products that are used on ships equipped with scrubbers. The share of this fuel in the Gazpromneft Marine Bunker basket will steadily decline due to MARPOL-2020 requirements and an increase in demand for more environmentally friendly grades, as well as the cessation of fuel oil production at our refineries by 2024.

Today, 2020, is unique in its way for a number of reasons. Tell us, have macroeconomic factors influenced the work of your company? And have the conditions for working with clients changed?

The beginning of 2020 can be safely called a period of challenges that had a significant impact on the sales structure and the capacity of the marine fuels market. On the one hand, the new environmental requirements of MARPOL-2020 came into force, on the other, there was a decrease in demand and oil prices, which led to a decrease in prices for bunker fuel and an increase in the growth of differentials for European ports.

In addition, restrictive measures were introduced due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But the new realities affected everyone – both ship owners and fuel suppliers, and the stability of the business largely depends on how effectively the processes are built in the companies, how the management decisions are made promptly.

As for us, we were able to quickly adapt to new conditions. They began to work more point-wise, actively, and with flexible pricing. As a result, at the end of the first quarter, they increased their market share and increased retail sales by 5% compared to the same period in 2019.

You have already mentioned the new environmental requirements of MARPOL2020. What should shipping companies prepare for?

The new environmental requirements were announced long before they came into force, so all market participants had time to prepare for them. Shipowners have to decide to switch to low-sulfur fuel or equip their fleet with scrubbers. For bunkering companies – to ensure the production and supply of marine fuel with a sulfur content of no more than 0.5%.

In its long-term development strategy, Gazprom Neft stakes on environmentally friendly marine fuels – they have high market potential and they minimize the impact on the environment.

Thanks to the large-scale modernization of oil refineries and the development of terminal assets, the company has in advance ensured the possibility of producing marine fuel that fully meets the increased environmental requirements.

The new fuel with our unique recipe is produced by the Omsk Refinery. In addition, we launched the production of a blended product with high environmental characteristics at the fuel terminals in St. Petersburg and Novorossiysk, and already in October 2019, we carried out the first bunkering of marine fuel with a sulfur content of less than 0.5%.

By the time MARPOL2020 entered into force, they had already accumulated expertise and extensive experience in working with new brands of oil products, which strengthened our status as a reliable and technologically advanced supplier of marine fuel.

As for the situation on the marine fuels market, it is stable both in terms of the availability of necessary products and in the rhythmic supply of oil products to ports.

Will the market conditions in terms of fuel grades and participating companies change due to MARPOL-2020 restrictions?

According to expert estimates, new environmental requirements will significantly change the structure of the marine fuels market. If earlier the share of dark oil products was about 70%, then in the coming years it will decrease to approximately 15–20%.

Distillates will become an alternative to fuel oil, but they will be gradually replaced by new grades of low-sulfur fuels. In addition, LNG will take an increasing share of the product basket of bunkering companies.

In the medium term, provided the necessary infrastructure is developed, NGV fuel has great potential.

How did the shipowners react to the new global environmental requirements? Have they changed the way they do business?

It is hardly possible to be mistaken, assuming that every manager these days relies on improving business efficiency. This applies to shipowners in full. Market participants strive to improve logistics, conserve resources, and care about energy efficiency. In this regard, the new restrictions of MARPOL-2020 have become very indicative.

One of the possible strategic decisions for shipowners was the installation of scrubbers to clean exhaust gases – this allows the continued use of cheaper dark fuels. At some point, this path even seemed the most attractive, because the price of scrubbers has dropped significantly. But the cost of equipment maintenance and expensive waste disposal, as well as possible new restrictions on nitrogen compounds emissions, actually offset these savings in the long term. Therefore, many shipowners chose another, slightly more costly, but environmentally friendly option and switched to using fuels with a sulfur content of no more than 0.5%.

I am confident that with the development of onshore and bunkering infrastructure, shipowners, assessing the advantages of LNG, will make a choice in favor of NGV fuel in the medium term.

The efficiency and stability of the business depend, among other things, on the implementation of new investment projects. What are the main development vectors currently relevant for Gazpromneft Marine Bunker?

We pay great attention to the implementation of our own LNG bunkering project – we plan to start gas bunkering next year. In addition, an important strategic task is the modernization and development of production assets – bunker terminals and the fleet.

How do you assess our SRH, what quality of service they provide, has anything changed for the better here?

Our specialized subsidiary, Gazpromneft Shipping, has many years of experience in partnership with both domestic and foreign shipyards. If we compare Russian and foreign ship repair companies, then they all have their advantages. So, foreign companies, due to the promptness of the supply of imported spare parts, can provide shorter repair times. In turn, Russian shipyards, due to their geographical proximity and simple logistics, provide ship repair services at more competitive prices.

Tell us about your work in the area of ​​industry standards. Are you participating at the Bunkering Association or Chamber of Shipping level in improving the regulations that govern shipping and bunkering activities? How successful is this work?

We are conducting this work both at the Russian and international levels. In particular, Gazpromneft Marine Bunker takes part in the work of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) on environmental issues of shipping, including special requirements for the quality of marine fuel. Now, with the participation of our consultants, a new edition of MARPOL-2020 is being developed, which is planned to include requirements for the use of marine fuel in the Arctic.

Initiatives implemented

Gazpromneft Marine Bunker is implementing a number of initiatives necessary for the development of the Russian bunkering industry as a whole. In 2018, we introduced into the practice of Russian shipping the international standard ISO 20519: 2017 Ships and marine technologies. Requirements for bunkering of ships using liquefied natural gas as fuel. In fact, this became the starting point for the precise creation of the regulatory framework for a new fuel segment – LNG bunkering.

In addition, our specialists are involved in the work on changing the excise taxation of operations with middle distillates. So, last year, dark marine fuel was excluded from the list of excisable goods, and now it is subject to excise duty as a middle distillate.

What is the current vector of development for the company and what can be expected in the mid-term?

We all perfectly understand the role of sea transport in the global economy. If the freight turnover between the countries continues to grow, the demand for the services of shipping companies will increase, and with it the demand for environmentally friendly marine fuel.

Our task is to develop in the common fairway and act ahead of dynamically changing market conditions. We were one of the first to present a new ecological type of fuel demanded by shipowners with a sulfur content of less than 0.5%. In 2021, we will start bunkering ships with LNG fuel. Both now and in the long term, we closely monitor the market situation, effectively cooperate with partners, and provide our customers with a service that meets international quality standards.

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Source: Manifold Times