Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Canal Crises: EIA—"Red Sea attacks increase shipping times and freight rates" + "Qatar, US may swap LNG cargoes to avert delays"

A twofer. First up, a data dense piece from the U.S. Energy Information Agency, February 1:


Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration using calculations from Vortexa
Note: Voyage time is calculated for laden Suezmax tankers traveling at 14 knots without extended chokepoint delays.

After Yemen-based Houthi militia attacks on commercial ships transiting the Red Sea started in November 2023, some vessels began opting to avoid the Bab el-Mandeb chokepoint—a narrow strait that borders the Yemeni coast and is the southern entrance to the Red Sea. Instead, they’re choosing to take longer, more costly routes around the tip of Africa.

Ships transiting between Europe and Asia via the Suez Canal must pass through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, which connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden. The Bab el-Mandeb Strait is an important oil and natural gas chokepoint, accounting for 12% of seaborne oil trade and 8% of liquefied natural gas (LNG) trade in the first half of 2023. Major oil and natural gas companies that are avoiding the Red Sea include Equinor, which operates mostly natural gas carriers, and bp, which operates both oil and natural gas carriers. As of January 23, 2024, other major energy companies pausing Red Sea transits include Euronav, QatarEnergy, Torm, Shell, and Reliance.

Vessels that do not pass through the Suez Canal via the Bab el-Mandeb Strait and Red Sea can go around southern Africa via the Cape of Good Hope, but that route can add significant time to the voyage, depending on the ship’s origin and its destination. A typical voyage from the Persian Gulf to the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp petroleum trading hub (ARA) via the Suez Canal takes 19 days. If the ship takes the Cape of Good Hope route, it takes nearly 35 days to reach the ARA. For products leaving the U.S. Gulf Coast and heading toward Asia, vessels typically pass through the Panama Canal, which is nearly a month-long trip. Due to the ongoing drought and restrictions at the Panama Canal, more Very Large Gas Carriers (VLGCs), which primarily carry propane and butane, started going through the Suez Canal. Now some of these VLGCs are going around the Cape of Good Hope. A journey from the U.S. Gulf Coast to Chiba in Japan through the Suez Canal adds about 17 days and one through the Cape of Good Hope adds about 21 days, compared with going through the Panama Canal.

Longer routes put upward pressure on freight rates because of fuel costs and fewer available ships. A VLGC, for example, consumes about $30,000 to $35,000 worth of fuel per day if using high-sulfur bunker fuel at average 2023 prices. In addition to adding to fuel costs, a longer voyage requires more ships to maintain the same delivery schedule, and fewer available ships contribute to higher tanker rates and costs.

Monthly U.S. light-duty vehicle transaction prices by select type (Jan 2022�&Dec 2023)

Data source: Vortexa
Note: Clean petroleum products include gasoline,
distillate, diesel, jet fuel, naphtha, and biodiesel.


After the attacks began in November, flows of oil, refined products, and natural gas passing through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait slowed. About 18% less crude oil flowed through the Bab el-Mandeb in December than on average from January to November 2023. Most crude oil trade that goes through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait leaves Russia and Iraq en route to Asia and the Mediterranean, respectively. Clean petroleum product flows through the Bab el-Mandeb Strait were 30% lower in December than the rest of 2023. The majority of petroleum product trade leaves Saudi Arabia and India bound for Europe and leaves Russia bound for Asia.

In December, 24% less LNG and 1% more liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) were traded globally compared with the rest of 2023. Vessel restrictions at the Panama Canal due to a drought are causing more VLGCs leaving from the United States to head east toward either the Suez Canal or the Cape of Good Hope. LPG flows through the Bab el-Mandeb increased by 59% in 2023 compared with 2022 because water conservation efforts at the Panama Canal began in January 2023, causing delays and higher costs for VLGCs. The Combined Maritime Forces, a partnership representing 39 nations, warned ships to avoid the Bab el-Mandeb Strait on January 12, which will likely reduce passages through January 2024....

....MORE

And from MontelNews (European energy), January 31: 

"The true fungibility of LNG is at play here"

(Montel) Qatari and US LNG producers may consider swapping cargoes to more efficiently circumnavigate logistical constraints in the Panama and Suez Canals, analysts told Montel.

A severe drought in the Panama Canal and attacks on merchant vessels by Yemen's Houthi rebels in the Red Sea have raised the prospect of cargo swap agreements, whereby a US cargo goes to Europe in place of a contracted Qatari cargo, and a Qatari cargo is instead shipped to an Asia-based US customer.

Qatar Energy has traditionally avoided such deals, preferring to deliver its own tankers. But given the current circumstances in the Red Sea, agreeing a cargo swap could become a possibility, said Jacopo Casadei, a gas analyst at Energy Aspects.

However, he pointed out that there was no evidence of any recent cargo swaps having been made.

Qatar this month began shipping LNG via South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope – which can add up to a fortnight to the voyage time from Qatar to Europe – to avoid the Red Sea.

Qatar was provisionally seen to have exported just 0.25m tonnes via the Suez Canal this month, compared with a usual monthly average of well over 1m tonnes, Kpler estimates showed.

“The total number of cargos produced by Qatar hasn't changed, it's basically just more of a logistical challenge in getting that supply into the market,” Casadei said.

“A lot of sense”....

....MUCH MORE

This is actually a pretty big deal. The evolution of natural gas from local and regional markets into a standardized, commodified global market has been a goal since the first little LNG carrier sailed in 1959.