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TotalEnergies supplies its first B100 for bunkering

  • Spanish Market: Oil products
  • 12/08/24

TotalEnergies Marine Fuels supplied its first delivery of B100 or used cooking oil methyl ester (Ucome) for bunkering in the port of Singapore on 5 August, as it seeks to expand sales of low-carbon fuels.

The global fuel supplier shipped 700t of Ucome using MT MAPLE, a IMO Type II chemical tanker owned by the Global Energy Group. The Ucome supplied is a second-generation, waste-based biofuel produced in southeast Asia.

TotalEnergies has supplied biofuel blends of up to 30pc and mixed with very low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) in the past, but this is the first time B100 is supplied in Singapore.

Singapore plans to push ahead with the bunkering of higher blends up to B100 in preparation for higher decarbonisation targets set by the IMO for the shipping industry to meet in 2030. Currently, the port sees regular bunkering of B24, which consists of 24pc Ucome blended with 76pc VLSFO.

TotalEnergies, along with other major suppliers like ExxonMobil, are among B24 suppliers in this key port. The island nation hit a record high of 518,000t consumption of B24 in 2023, making it the first alternative marine fuel that ship owners adopted and bunkered the most in this port, data from the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) show.

TotalEnergies is known to supply LNG and bio-methane as a bunker fuel in France and the ARA region.

Argus assessed its B24 spot prices in Singapore at $693-706/t on a delivered on board (dob) basis on 8 August.


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22/01/25

Syria issues first post-Assad oil tenders

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Winter storm shuts asphalt terminals, hits demand


21/01/25
21/01/25

Winter storm shuts asphalt terminals, hits demand

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Texas, Louisiana ports closed by winter storm: Update


21/01/25
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Texas, Louisiana ports closed by winter storm: Update

Updates status of operations at Port Houston facilities. Houston, 21 January (Argus) — Ports in Texas and Louisiana remained closed to shipping traffic Tuesday afternoon due to a winter storm, a shipping agent said. Marine pilots suspended boardings at the Texas ports of Houston, Galveston, Texas City and Freeport late on 20 January. Traffic also was halted at the Sabine-Neches Waterway on the Texas-Louisiana border, which offers access to terminals and refineries in Port Arthur and Beaumont, Texas, as well as Cheniere's Sabine Pass liquefied natural gas terminal. Pilots also halted traffic at the Louisiana port of Lake Charles late on 20 January. Port Houston facilities, which include eight public terminals on the Houston Ship Channel, will remain closed through Wednesday, according to statement from port officials. Vessel operations may resume at container terminals on Wednesday evening, the statement said. By Tray Swanson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Major NOLA terminals closed for winter storm


21/01/25
21/01/25

Major NOLA terminals closed for winter storm

Houston, 21 January (Argus) — The port of New Orleans remains closed on Tuesday afternoon due to US Gulf coast snow storms, causing terminals to shut or declare force majeures. Port officials cut off water supplies to port facilities beginning 19 January because of freezing temperatures, significant snowfall and high winds forecast by the National Weather Service (NWS). Operations are expected to be down at least for the rest of today. Host's United Bulk Terminal location at Nola declared force majeure on 20 January because of an expected 3-6 inches of snowfall. The port of Lake Charles in Louisiana also closed on 20 January and the Sabine-Neches Waterway on the Texas-Louisiana border was closed on 21 January. Associated Terminals at Nola closed its doors early on 21 January due to the storm. The company said vessels will be discharged once weather conditions improve and personnel are able to return to the site, but did not give a specific date. Major barge line ARTco, the transportation arm of ADM, shut down operations as well and is anticipated to return to 22 January if weather permits. CGB Barge has also halted operations in New Orleans and is waiting for conditions to improve before resuming work. Arctic conditions are anticipated at the port through Thursday, according to the NWS. Travel will be hazardous due to the snow, ice and wind chill of up to 20mph. By Meghan Yoyotte Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Germany's Miro CDU outage tightens products supply


21/01/25
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