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Cheap oil is taking shipping routes back to the 1800s

2016-03-04 11:54:33

The plummeting price of oil on international markets has had many effects one

of which is that it may be cheaper for ships to travel right around Africa than

go through the Suez Canal.

The Suez Canal was one of the most significant engineering projects of the 19th

Century. It was a gargantuan task that took nearly 20 years to build and an

estimated 1.5 million workers took part with many thousands dying in the

process. But when it finally opened in 1869, ships could travel from the Red

Sea between Africa and Asia to the Mediterranean, cutting weeks off a

journey. It was a revolution for trade.

Ever since, passage through the canal has been considered more or less vital to

global business. Shipping firms pay what amounts to several billion dollars

every year to the Suez Canal Authority, an Egyptian state-owned entity, for the

privilege of travelling via the canal.

To take an example, it cuts a modern journey from Singapore to Rotterdam in the

Netherlands by nearly 3,500 nautical miles saving vessel owners lots of time

and lots of money.

However, more and more some ships are deciding not to take the Suez route.

Instead, they are travelling around the Cape of Good Hope, right at the

southern tip of Africa. Over 100 ships did this between late October 2015 and

the end of the year.

I ve been covering shipping for the last eight years, says Michelle Wiese

Bockmann, from oil industry analysis firm OPIS Tanker Tracker. It is very rare

to see this volume going round the Cape. Right now, she s keeping tabs on half

a dozen diesel and jet fuel-carrying ships on this very route.

Sea journeys aren t as costly as they have been in recent years

One of the big factors here, explains Bockmann, is the low price of oil. This

means that bunker fuel the thick, heavy fuel the ships themselves run on

is currently very cheap. Indeed, Singapore prices for such fuel have fallen

from around $400 ( 286) per metric ton in May 2015 to around $150 ( 107) today.

As a result, sea journeys aren t as costly as they have been in recent years.

But is there any sense in taking longer than you need to? Ship manufacturer

Maersk estimates that a vessel travelling at 13.5 knots will take an extra 11

days to go via the Cape. Why bother?

For one thing, there are steep fees for using the Suez Canal Maersk says

these can be approximately $350,000 ( 249,000) per ship. There are other costs,

too. Rose George, author of Deep Sea and Foreign Going, was on board a ship

using the Canal a few years ago. She notes that vessels must agree to taking on

a Suez crew for the transit.

[The Suez crew] seem to do nothing but listen to tinny radio and try to sell

souvenirs, says George, adding the ships often have to pay a cigarette tax .

On each voyage, Suez costs a ship about 400 ($560) of cigarettes, as well as

dozens of chocolate bars from the bond locker.

These irritations aside, there is also the tricky economics of oil and shipping

markets.

More and more oil and refined oil products are being kept at sea or in storage

as traders wait for prices to rise again

For one thing, at the moment traders are playing with what s called a contango

more and more oil and refined oil products are being kept at sea or in

storage as traders wait for prices to rise again. Currently there is an

oversupply of crude oil around the world, and while we have more crude than we

need, the demand for gasoline a refined oil product is quite high. This

situation has led to volatility in the market and that s where traders are

making their money, says Bockmann.

One of the trading strategies would be that they haven t sold the cargo and

they need additional time, she points out. She also adds that ships can

sometimes be anchored offshore a situation known as floating storage where

they simply wait for the market to favour what they have on board. Floating

storage hit a five-year record in December and it hasn t really dropped that

much since then, Bockmann says.

For ship owners, then, the ball seems to be mostly in their court. They can

choose to be at sea longer in certain cases and they can take longer routes,

even shopping unsold cargo round various ports in Asia, Africa and Europe, in

an attempt to find the right buyer at the right time. The ships must be the

right size for a given port, and the products on board need to meet required

standards in the local market but as long as someone suitable does,

eventually, buy that cargo at a favourable price, then the traders will do

well. If not, they could lose money.

For now some ships have decided to take those additional thousands of miles

round the Cape, hoping that at the end of the voyage they ll come out in

profit. It may seem strange but in the world of oil, sometimes you re better

off taking the long way round.