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Houthi attacks put more oil on the water, boost Singapore bunkering - IEA

Houthi attacks which have rerouted ships towards longer journeys around Southern Africa have greatly raised freights of oil at sea and hiked ship refuelling sales at Singapore to alltime highs, the International Energy Firm said on Thursday.

In February alone, oil on water surged by 85 million barrels as repeated tanker attacks in the Red Sea diverted more freights around the Cape of Good Hope, the Paris-based energy guard dog stated in a month-to-month report.

At almost 1.9 billion barrels as of end-February, oil on water struck its second highest level considering that the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The attacks in the Middle East added to the increase of longer journeys globally, as sanctions on Russian barrels had already been sending out freights on brand-new paths to reach more far-off markets.

For Singapore - the world's top centre of maritime refuelling, or bunkering - the IEA raised its projection for 2024 shipments this year by 110,000 barrels each day (bpd), the majority of it fuel oil.

The rerouting of ships is also increasing bunkering at smaller southern African refuelling ports, the IEA added, such as Walvis Bay in Namibia, Richards Bay and Durban in South Africa and Port Louis in Mauritius.

Efforts to comprise time by sailing at increased speed act as an additional boost to sustain usage, the IEA added.

(source: Reuters)