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Russia increases fuel exports to Senegal on shipping sector demand - traders, LSEG data

Russia has significantly increased its fuel exports to Senegal this year on increasing bunker need, as more business are diverting cargoes around Africa rather of using Red Sea routes, traders stated and LSEG data showed.

Russian fuel oil materials to Senegal in the first two months of 2024 reached 550,000 metric lots compared with 1.08 million tons in the whole of 2023 and 0.37 million heaps in 2022, changing oil product supplies from Rotterdam, the data revealed.

Senegal has strong development in bunkering, one trader stated. The bunker fuel providers are gaining from the situation in Suez.

Given that December in 2015, lots of shipping companies have advised their vessels to sail around southern Africa rather of using the Red Sea due to attacks by Houthi militants, leading to bunker fuel demand development.

Fuel oil is commonly utilized for fueling ships, or bunkering. Senegal might also utilize it for power generation, market sources said.

Senegalese oil minister Antoine Felix Abdoulaye Diome did not react to ask for comment when contacted .

The bulk of Russian fuel oil products to Senegal are delivered from the Russian Baltic port of Vysotsk, and likewise from the ports of Ust-Luga and St. Petersburg.

Russia has actually also exported about 0.2 million metric lots of diesel to Senegal because the start of this year, versus 0.8 million lots in 2023.

Most of those volumes are of high-sulphur gasoil loaded at the Black Sea port of Novorossiisk, according to LSEG data.

You could likewise take bunker fuel to Nigeria, but there is more piracy danger, so it's better to take it north, the trader continued, including that he would expect further bunker need growth in African nations because of the Red Sea scenario.

The European Union's complete embargo on Russian oil products came into effect in February 2023, and the bulk of Russia's fuel oil and VGO was redirected to other areas, mainly Asia and African nations.

(source: Reuters)