Europe Rushes to Meet US Fuel Demand, Spiking Freight Costs

November 1, 2016

File photo: Aurelie Moulin
File photo: Aurelie Moulin

European oil traders rushed on Tuesday to book vessels to carry gasoline to consumers on the U.S. East Coast left stranded without their main domestic supply source, more than quadrupling shipping costs, traders and ship brokers told Reuters. 

An explosion late on Monday on the Colonial pipeline, which carries roughly one-third of the 3.2 million barrels per day (bpd) of gasoline consumed on the East Coast, makes U.S. drivers more reliant on imported oil products.
But by noon on Tuesday, some 14 ships had been provisionally booked to sail from Europe to the region, raising the cost of 37,000 tonne vessels from roughly $4.20 per tonne to more than $17 per tonne.

"Everyone panicked, so they just put vessels on subjects to cover themselves," one ship broker said.

In recent days, less than a handful of ships were provisionally booked during morning trade. Tuesday's rush pressed Worldscale shipping rates from 87.5 on Monday evening to as high as 155.

The ships were not yet fully fixed, but with few alternatives to move fuels within the United States, traders and ship brokers said Europe's refiners were likely to fill a large part of the demand, giving a major boost to refining margins.

"It looks like a longer and more serious situation than last time," one trader said, citing a Colonial pipeline slowdown in October due to a leak. "And then there were many arbitrage fixtures ... U.S. imports spiked higher to over 1 million barrels per day (bpd)."

U.S. gasoline futures for December were up about 13 cents, or just under 9 percent, at $1.55 per gallon at 1333 GMT, pricing that would likely make selling into the United States attractive.

"We expect that even if repairs can be done quickly, (U.S. officials) will be very cautious about restarting the pipelines, especially since Line 1 just suffered a spill and tensions between pipeline companies and environmentalist groups have never been higher," analysts at Barclays said in a note.

It added that a sustained outage would mean "several hundred thousand bpd of additional waterborne gasoline and diesel flows" to the U.S. Atlantic Coast.

"This should support European cracks that might otherwise have faced limited upside through year-end," Barclays said.
 

(By Libby George and Ahmad Ghaddar, Reporting by Libby George)

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