News
07/05/25
Polish seaborne LPG imports rise on Russia embargo
The EU ban on some Russian imports led to higher utilisation of Poland's Baltic
Sea terminals, writes Waldemar Jaszczyk London, 7 May (Argus) — Polish seaborne
LPG imports surged in the first quarter as the country's Baltic Sea terminals
became the market's main supply route following the EU's ban on Russian
propane-butane mix and propane arrivals. But the growth was capped by reduced
re-exports to Ukraine, softening domestic demand and more butane arriving from
Russia. The four Baltic Sea terminals received 320,000t of LPG in January-March,
up from 282,000t a year earlier, Kpler data show. European LPG distributor SHV's
900,000 t/yr Gdansk facility received 181,000t, and the Alpetrol-run 420,000
t/yr Gdynia terminal took 89,000t, up by 26pc and 37pc, respectively. Deliveries
to state-owned fuel supplier Orlen Paliwa's 250,000 t/yr Szczecin terminal rose
by 24pc to 37,000t but were below the 50,000-60,000 t/yr seen in previous years
given modernisation works. The firm plans to raise Szczecin throughputs by 50pc
to 400,000 t/yr by mid-2025. These offset a decline in imports to petrochemical
producer Azoty's 437,000 t/yr propane dehydrogenation (PDH) complex in Police by
more than a half to 19,000t. Azoty is negotiating a sale of the plant to Polish
oil firm Orlen as it looks to cut debt accrued largely to develop it. The EU
embargo on Russian LPG, which took effect on 20 December, boosted seaborne
intake by forcing Polish importers to shift their supply routes to northwest
Europe. Propane and propane-butane mix accounted for over 90pc of Russia's LPG
exports to Poland, while normal butane and isobutane, which are not sanctioned,
took the balance. Russia was the key supplier to Poland historically, with a
43pc share of all imports in 2024 at 1mn t/yr, according to Polish LPG
association POGP. But weaker import demand as a result of stockbuilding prior to
the embargo's start and reduced re-exports to Ukraine, which has shifted its
supply routes to Danube river ports in the south, limited the increase in
seaborne arrivals. And rising intakes of pure normal butane and isobutane from
Russia by rail, which is then blended with propane and sold as autogas, has also
weighed on Baltic imports. Russian butane deliveries averaged around 30,000
t/month in the first quarter compared with the more typical 80,000 t/month prior
to sanctions. Poland seaborne LPG imports Send comments and request more
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