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Marine fuel global weekly market update

  • Spanish Market: Biofuels, E-fuels, Emissions, Fertilizers, Hydrogen, Natural gas, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 25/09/23

A weekly Argus news digest of interest to the conventional and alternative marine fuel markets. To speak to our team about accessing the stories below and access to Argus Marine Fuels, please contact marinefuels@argusmedia.com.

Alternative marine fuels

22 September NYK bets on ammonia for sustainable bunkering Japanese shipping firm Nippon Yusen Kaisha (NYK) expects ammonia to account for about 50pc of its marine fuel demand by 2050.

22 September LNG bunker avails, barging disconnect: Panel Tight US LNG bunker barge availabilities combined with an increase in LNG spot bunkering demand is creating a disconnect between LNG bunker supply and demand, according to panelists at an industry event.

22 September Retailers push for low-carbon marine fuels A retailer coalition is trying to reduce its carbon footprint by negotiating with shipowners transporting their cargoes to replace 280,000 metric tonnes (t) of conventional marine fuels with zero-emission marine fuel starting in 2025.

22 September US shipowners face 'stranded assets' risk The decarbonisation of the shipping industry risks leaving US shipowners with "stranded assets", delegates heard at the Argus Sustainable Marine fuels conference in Houston.

22 September Oberon fuels to supply bunker biomethanol by mid-2025 California-based supplier Oberon Fuels will begin the production and supply of dimethyl ether (DME)-based biomethanol for bunkering out of its upcoming south Texas plant, the company told Argus.

22 September China's biodiesel, UCO exports fall in August Chinese biodiesel exports fell to 161,000t in August, down by 2pc on the month and by 13pc on the year, because of alleged fraud concerns from Europe.

21 September US-Indonesia tech tie-up to boost UCO traceability US renewables traceability platform Veriflux and the Indonesian Used Cooking Oil (UCO) Exporters Association (Aemji) have partnered to connect tracing technology, which could increase Indonesian UCO trade to the US.

21 September Cosco to buy stakes in Mol's three LNG vessels Chinese state-controlled shipowner Cosco has decided to partner with Japanese shipowner Mitsui OSK Lines (Mol) in building three LNG vessels tied to term charters with Chinese gas distributor ENN.

20 September Orica eyes 25,000t/yr green ammonia exports Australian chemicals and explosives firm Orica plans to export 25,000 t/yr of green ammonia, as its joint-venture Hunter Valley hydrogen hub in New South Wales approaches a financial investment decision in the first half of next year.

20 September Alternatives may drive methanol market growth The growth of sustainable alternatives to traditional methanol production sources likely will shape the market over the next several years, industry leaders said this week at the Argus Methanol Forum.

20 September Global methanol demand slowing: Argus Global demand for methanol has slowed this year, driven by stagnate economic growth and high interest rates, according to an Argus Consulting outlook.

20 September Royal Caribbean tests biofuel blend on cruise ship US-based cruise ship operator Royal Caribbean said it has successfully tested and used a biofuel blend on its Symphony of the Seas vessel, marking a milestone in the company's efforts to lower its emissions.

20 September USDA pulls China biofuels report over Neste allegations The US Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service (USDA FAS) in Beijing has withdrawn its China Biofuels Annual pending corrections to allegations in the report that Finnish firm Neste's biofuels refinery in Singapore may have received Indonesian palm oil exported from China as used cooking oil (UCO).

20 September Japan's Mol to charter methanol-fuelled bulk carrier Japanese shipping firm Mitsui OSK Line (Mol) is chartering a methanol dual-fuel bulk carrier, which is expected to launch in 2027 to carry mainly biomass and grains.

19 September Binding biomethane target still possible for EU The EU could still agree a binding share for renewable gas, although this will require overcoming resistance from EU member states to further climate and energy obligations, an EU official said.

19 September KPI Ocean Connect supplies B30 to Uni Tankers Marine fuels supplier KPI Ocean Connect has successfully supplied bio-marine fuel to a vessel owned by Uni-Tankers in Amsterdam.

19 September Maersk and CMA-CGM partner for 'greener' fuels Danish container shipping giant Maersk and French marine logistics company CMA-CGM have formed a partnership to drive decarbonisation in shipping, they said.

19 September DNV flags GHG emission calculation concerns The shipping industry faces a significant challenge calculating lifecycle greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from alternative marine fuels following a change in international maritime regulations, according to vessel classification society DNV.

18 September ARA B100-MGO avg weekly spread flips to discount The spread of marine biodiesel with 100pc advanced fatty acid methyl ester (Fame) in ARA on a dob basis to conventional marine gasoil (MGO) flipped to a $70.28/t discount in the week to 15 September for the first time since January.

18 September S Korea's GS Caltex supplies bio-marine fuel to Hyundai South Korean oil refiner GS Caltex supplied its first cargo of bio-marine fuel to two Hyundai vessels during 15-16 September.

18 September Port of Rotterdam, Duisport plan hydrogen network The Port of Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, and the German inland port of Duisburg are planning to jointly develop a network of hydrogen pipelines between their sites, with the first potentially completed by 2027, according to a feasibility study carried out by the ports.

Conventional marine fuels

22 September High bulk orders set to cause fleet oversupply Bulk carrier orders slipped in the week to 17 September, according to data compiled by Argus, but the overall orderbook remained at a high enough level to swamp momentum in 2024.

21 September UAE's Fujairah bans barges serving competing ports The UAE's port of Fujairah, the world's third largest bunkering centre, has banned service boats registered with the port from providing services to vessels at the neighbouring Khor Fakkan and Kalba anchorage areas as of 20 October.

21 September Vietnam's NSRP refinery to restart units in early Oct Vietnam's 200,000 b/d Nghi Son Refinery and Petrochemical (NSRP) plans to begin restarting key units at its Nghi Son refinery from 7-9 October, the refiner said.

21 September Higher tonne-miles lift product tanker orders Newbuild orders for product tankers were at a 10-year high of 10.72mn dwt in the first eight months of 2023, according to shipping association Bimco. The current fleet, at 129.44mn dwt, is expected to increase by 10.3pc with 140 vessels on order.

20 September Japan's bonded bunker sales remain slow in July Japan's bonded marine fuel sales fell from a year earlier in July, as refinery issues and turnarounds limited supplies.

20 September CGB acquires St Louis shipyard Consolidated Grain and Barge (CGB) has acquired JB Shipyards in St Louis, Missouri, expanding its operations and capacity.

20 September Turkey raises ship agent fees at ports and straits Turkey has increased the minimum service fees charged by shipping agents at all Turkish ports and at the Turkish straits.

20 September Swedish diesel demand hit seven-month low in July Swedish diesel demand sank to its lowest in seven months, data from government data provider Statistics Sweden show, with diesel demand sinking to the lowest since January when demand is seasonally suppressed.

20 September KPC sells rare HFO, withdraws naphtha on refinery issue Kuwait's state-owned refiner KPC has sold a rare mid-sulphur heavy fuel oil (HFO) cargo and withdrawn a naphtha cargo offer, following a sudden power outage at two of its refineries on 17 September.

19 September US retail diesel price climbs to 10-month high: EIA US retail motor fuel prices rose further in the week ended 18 September, with diesel prices hitting a 10-month high, according to data from the Energy Information Administration (EIA).

19 September Pertamina to develop new Jakarta terminal Indonesian state-owned refiner Pertamina and state-owned port operator Pelindo have agreed to jointly develop the Jakarta Integrated Green Terminal project in Kalibaru, north Jakarta.

19 September USGC MR rates fall by half on maintenance Medium range (MR) tanker rates in the US Gulf coast have fallen to their lowest levels since early 2023 as sluggish Latin American import demand and US Gulf refinery maintenance have weighed on US Gulf refined product export volumes.

18 September Africa-bound MR rates from ME Gulf rise to 4-month high Clean Medium Range (MR) freight rates from the Mideast Gulf to east Africa and South Africa rose to a four-month high, supported by firm demand and higher bunker costs.

18 September Marine insurance recovering post-Covid: IUMI Marine insurance premiums rose in 2022 as international trade continued to rebound from the Covid-19 pandemic, but inflationary pressures and new kinds of risks are increasing uncertainty, the International Union of Marine Insurance (IUMI) said today.

18 September Equinor shuts FCC at Mongstad for six-week maintenance Norwegian state-controlled Equinor will close the fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) unit at its 203,000 b/d Mongstad refinery for maintenance until the end of October, the company told Argus.

18 September US, EU differ on oil price cap enforcement Washington says the G7 price cap on Russia's oil exports is working, even if most sales are above it, while EU officials admit infractions are hard to police.


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15/11/24

Cop: Oil firms commit $500mn to energy access: Update

Cop: Oil firms commit $500mn to energy access: Update

Updates throughout Baku, 15 November (Argus) — European oil firms TotalEnergies, BP, Shell and Equinor today announced a $500mn joint investment commitment "over the coming years" for universal energy access in sub-Saharan Africa and south and southeast Asia. The firms will jointly invest in a broad range of solutions, including solar home systems, mini/metro grids, clean cooking solutions, and enabling technologies such as e-mobility, energy storage and management solutions, TotalEnergies said. The investment is in support of the UN sustainable development goal 7, which aims for universal access to sustainable, affordable and reliable energy by 2030. The timeline for the investment is unclear. "A global private equity firm with a strong track record in impact investing, has been selected to manage the joint investment," the firms said. Investments in clean energy need to rise to around $4.5 trillion/yr by 2030 to be in line with an IEA scenario compatible with a 1.5°C temperature rise above pre-industrial levels, the lower limit under the Paris Agreement. The Paris climate accord seeks to limit global warming to "well below" 2°C above the pre-industrial average and preferably to 1.5°C. Developing countries alone could require up to $1 trillion/yr by 2030 and $1.3 trillion/yr by 2035 . TotalEnergies reported a profit of $22bn in 2023, while Shell and BP posted profits of $20.3bn and $13.8bn, respectively. Equinor made a profit of $11.9bn in 2023 . The announcement was made as the UN Cop 29 climate summit is taking place in Baku, Azerbaijan. The Cop 29 presidency signalled earlier this year that it was working on a $1bn climate fund , capitalised by fossil fuel-producing countries and companies. The fund is due to be a public-private partnership, with "concessional and grant-based support to rapidly address the consequences of natural disasters" in developing countries, Cop 29 president and Azeri ecology and natural resources minister Mukhtar Babayev said earlier this year. But the presidency has yet to announce progress on the plans, although finance announcements are typically expected to land during the summit's 'Finance day', which was yesterday. Cop 29 lead negotiator Yalchin Rafiyev said today that the presidency "received interest in the fund" and that it has not been delayed. By Bachar Halabi and Tng Yong Li Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Singapore joins EU-China green finance taxonomy


15/11/24
15/11/24

Cop: Singapore joins EU-China green finance taxonomy

Singapore, 15 November (Argus) — Singapore has joined the Multi-Jurisdiction Common Ground Taxonomy (M-CGT) during the UN Cop 29 summit on 14 November, expanding an existing agreement between the EU and China on a set of financial environmental objectives and criteria. The M-CGT allows for wider cross-border green financing and development of sustainable finance markets. It was developed by the People's Bank of China, the EU Directorate-general for financial stability, the Financial services and capital markets union, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore. The M-CGT is a comparison of the sustainable finance taxonomies of China, the EU and Singapore, and it builds on the EU-China Common Ground Taxonomy, an initiative launched in 2021 aimed at enhancing the interoperability of the EU's and China's taxonomies. It is designed to accommodate more jurisdictions in future, which will further help facilitate cross-border climate finance flows, and in turn improve investment environments. The M-CGT constitutes a set of environmental objectives and criteria that serves as a reference for entities such as financial institutions, corporates and investors to determine what can be considered green, said a joint statement by the parties. "While the M-CGT is not legally binding, green bonds and funds that align the M-CGT criteria can be considered by cross-border investors whose markets reference the taxonomies which are mapped to M-CGT, subject to applicable laws and regulations of each jurisdiction," stated the parties. The M-CGT is important "for enhancing the interoperability of taxonomies across jurisdictions," said Ma Jun, chairman of the Green Finance Committee of China Society for Finance and Banking, adding that market usage of the CGT in the past two years, including for labelling Chinese green bonds sold to international investors, has shown it can help to cut cross-border transaction costs and boost green capital flows, particularly to developing economies. The initial mapping exercise for the initiative indicated that around 60pc of common activities could be clearly defined under the most stringent criteria, mainly in the manufacturing, transportation, water and waste sectors, and 5pc of common activities in the electricity generation and construction sectors. Climate finance has been a focus of this year's Cop 29 summit, especially on agreeing a new climate finance goal for developing countries . Discussions have so far only led to a complicated draft that still lacks a position on an amount from developed countries, which are pushing for an increase in private finance mobilisation as part of a multi-layered goal. A UN-mandated high-level group noted yesterday that international private finance could meet around half of the funds that developing countries need — $1 trillion/yr by 2030 and $1.3 trillion/yr by 2035. But private investors have long been calling on governments to improve investment environments through clearer policies and provide easier access to public capital markets. By Prethika Nair Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Korea’s Plagen plans Azeri green methanol plant


15/11/24
15/11/24

Cop: Korea’s Plagen plans Azeri green methanol plant

Baku, 15 November (Argus) — South Korean clean energy firm Plagen has signed an initial agreement to develop a green methanol production plant near the port of Baku, Azerbaijan. Plagen expects that the plant, which it described as Azerbaijan's first green methanol facility, will produce 10,000 t/yr of the fuel by 2028. It will use Plagen's technology, the firm said at a side event at the UN Cop 29 climate summit today. The methanol will be produced from agricultural waste and wood waste, including hazelnuts shells and almond shells, which will be sourced from Azerbaijan, Plagen chief executive officer John Kyung said. The production process yields 96t of methanol from 300t of biomass. The produced methanol will be used as bunker fuel, and contribute Baku port's goal to reach "carbon neutrality" by 2035 amid increased traffic through the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route, as ships seek alternatives to the fraught Suez Canal route. Kyung said today that the firm also has plans to produce green methanol at Indonesia's Batam to supply as bunker fuel to Singapore, the biggest bunkering port in the world. Plagen also expects 32,000 t/yr of green methanol production by 2027 at a plant in Taebaek, South Korea. This is up from 10,000 t/yr as previously planned . By Tng Yong Li Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: European oil firms commit $500mn to energy access


15/11/24
15/11/24

Cop: European oil firms commit $500mn to energy access

Baku, 15 November (Argus) — European oil firms TotalEnergies, BP, Shell and Equinor today announced a $500mn joint investment commitment for universal energy access in sub-Saharan Africa and south and southeast Asia. The firms will jointly invest in a broad range of solutions, including solar home systems, mini/metro grids, clean cooking solutions, and enabling technologies such as e-mobility, energy storage and management solutions, TotalEnergies said. The investment is in support of the UN sustainable development goal 7, which aims for universal access to sustainable, affordable and reliable energy by 2030. Investments in clean energy need to rise to around $4.5 trillion/yr by 2030 to be in line with an IEA scenario compatible with a 1.5°C temperature rise above pre-industrial levels, the lower limit under the Paris Agreement. The Paris climate accord seeks to limit global warming to "well below" 2°C above the pre-industrial average and preferably to 1.5°C. Developing countries alone could require up to $1 trillion/yr by 2030 and $1.3 trillion/yr by 2035 . TotalEnergies reported a profit of $22bn in 2023, while Shell and BP posted profits of $20.3bn and $13.8bn, respectively. Equinor made a profit of $11.9bn in 2023 . The announcement was made as the UN Cop 29 climate summit is taking place in Baku, Azerbaijan. The Cop 29 presidency signalled earlier this year that it was working on a $1bn climate fund , capitalised by fossil fuel-producing countries and companies. The fund was due to be a public-private partnership, with "concessional and grant-based support to rapidly address the consequences of natural disasters" in developing countries, according to Cop 29 president and Azeri ecology and natural resources minister Mukhtar Babayev. But the presidency has yet to announce progress on the plans. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Cop: Only 1pc of UN-reported methane leaks acted on


15/11/24
15/11/24

Cop: Only 1pc of UN-reported methane leaks acted on

London, 15 November (Argus) — Governments and companies notified of methane leaks by the UN-run International Methane Emissions Observatory (IMEO) only reported back on actions taken to resolve the leaks in 1pc of cases this year, the organisation said today at the UN Cop 29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan. IMEO has since 2023 run the Methane Alert Response System (MARS), a service using satellite data to warn states and companies about methane leaks, allowing them to take action to mitigate. Methane is deemed responsible for roughly one third of global temperature increase since the industrial revolution, and efforts to reduce emissions of the gas have gathered pace in recent years as measurement and reporting infrastructure has improved. But the response by governments and operators to MARS notifications has hardly kept pace with the system's capabilities, IMEO said. IMEO made 1,225 notifications of detected methane plumes to governments and companies in the first nine months of 2024. Of these notifications only 43pc were acknowledged by the recipients. Recipients responded with information about the source of the emissions and any mitigation action taken in only 15 cases, or roughly 1pc. Turkmenistan received the most notifications, at 388, or 32pc of the total. The US, Iran and Algeria followed, each receiving more than 100 notifications, with the four top countries accounting for almost two-thirds of notifications. But there have been some notable success stories, including the halting of a leak at Algeria's Hassi Messaoud oilfield, which is estimated to have been emitting 27,500t/yr of methane since at least 1999, IMEO said. OGMP 2.0 signups slow The number of new firms joining the UN's Oil and Gas Methane Partnership (OGMP 2.0) programme fell to 20 this year, below the 35 new members added last year. The voluntary initiative provides a framework and support for oil and gas companies to measure, report and reduce their methane emissions. It now counts 140 member companies, who account for 42pc of global oil and gas production. Requirements on participants to improve measurements rachet up over time, and as the scheme has entered its third year, many participants have had to demonstrate for the first time detailed source-level measurements in order to maintain their "gold standard" quality badge. New data suggest that a gap observed between reported emissions of OGMP member firms and atmospheric methane concentrations may be a result of a mix of underreporting among OGMP members and higher methane intensity at non-OGMP firms. Atmospheric observations suggest global methane emissions from hydrocarbons stand at 80mn-140mn t/yr. But OGMP members accounting for 28pc of global production reported emissions of only 1.1mn t in 2023. Underreporting may occur because firms are at the initial lower levels of the programme, and report only less-accurate estimates based on emissions factors, IMEO said. And data from many major assets are missing, while other hydrocarbon infrastructure at which leaks occur is operated by non-OGMP member firms. But OGMP firms may indeed have lower methane intensity than non-OGMP firms, both because they have a higher proportion of far-offshore assets, fewer small wellpads which are prone to leak more, and because having decided to take part in the programme they are more conscientious. The increasing requirements on participants to improve their measurements will likely further clarify the reasons behind this gap in the coming years, IMEO said. By Rhys Talbot Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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