Singapore See Storage Tanker Decline As Landed Terminals Gain Favour Ahead of 2020 LSFO Demand

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According to a Platts report, the number of tankers floating around the Singapore Strait has seen a steady decline in recent weeks as low sulfur material gets moved to landed storage to meet rising demand for IMO 2020-compliant marine fuel, market sources said.

What is it?

Several vessels that had been storing low sulfur fuel for weeks around Singapore have moved out in recent weeks after offloading their cargoes, according to sources and cFlow, S&P Global Platts trade-flow software.

These include three Suezmax vessels — Nordic Sirius, Nordic Apollo and Nordic Castor — and five VLCCs — E Mei San, Ceres I, Duna, Seaways Mulan and Silvana III.

Product Moved To Landed Storage

Much of their product has either been moved to landed storage or sold to end-user vessels that have started using low sulfur fuel ahead of the IMO 2020 regulations.

An estimated 5-6 million mt of low sulfur material is currently being stored on floaters around Singapore, down from more than 7 million mt in early November, traders said.

Singapore's appetite for cleaner fuels jump

Onshore Logistics Ready for the Big Switch?

While the move indicates onshore logistics are increasingly getting ready for the fuel switch, the drawdown in inventories — which took several months to build — also highlights the challenges the industry is likely to face in ensuring sufficient supply.

As shipping companies started to buy IMO-compliant bunker fuel, LSFO stocks on VLCCs have moved to shore tanks due to operational reasons, traders said.

Landed Terminals Better?

“Loading from VLCCs takes more time than from landed terminals. Especially now that barge supply is tight, it is better to load from landed terminals,” a fuel oil trader based in Singapore said.

Singapore’s commercial stockpiles of heavy distillates — which include cracked and straight run high sulfur and low sulfur fuel oil, and low sulfur waxy residue — have increased in the last three consecutive weeks, data from Enterprise Singapore showed.

Stocks increased from 20.9 million barrels in the week ended November 6 to 22.12 million barrels in the week ended December 4, the data showed.

Singapore residues stocks

FSUs Around Singapore

At least 40 tankers are being used as floating storage units in the waters around Singapore and nearby Malaysian ports, mostly for fuel oil storage, according to market sources and Platts cFlow. This compares with 44 tankers at the end of October.

Among them, 37 tankers were heard holding cargoes to meet the LSFO requirements for the impending IMO 2020, and 28 of those vessels are located around Singapore’s port limits, according to market sources and Platts cFlow.

The bulk of FSUs in the region are loaded with LSFO or blending components, in preparation for supplying compliant low sulfur fuel for ships, said market sources.

Vessels carrying crudes may be holding grades which can be directly used as a low sulfur bunker fuel, such as Pyrenees crude from Australia, and several Aframax tankers carrying these low sulfur crude grades into the region were heard to be transferring product onto several FSUs parked around Singapore, sources said.

Even so, with only about 2 million mt/month or so of LSFO heard imported into Singapore for November and December each, a drawdown from the existing stockpiles is imminent going into the first quarter of 2020, said traders.

“We have only just about entered proper transition [to LSFO], so it may take some time before there’s a major significant drawdown,” added a Singapore-based trader.

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Source: Platts