The final quarter of 2019 marked a massive decline of
high-sulfur fuel oil (HSFO) sales as the industry transitioned into
compliance with the IMO 2020 sulphur cap, according to international
shipping association BIMCO.
In Singapore, the world’s largest bunkering hub, the bunker sale
landscape saw significant change as the sale of HSFO dropped in a matter
of months. In contrast, the sale of low-sulfur fuels skyrocketed in the
final quarter.
The first wave of IMO2020 preliminary estimates from the Maritime and
Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) indicates that a total of 4,465
thousand tons were sold in December 2019, a 4% increase compared to
December 2018 and the highest sale of bunker fuel sold in Singapore
since January 2018.
Sales of low-sulfur fuels, including LSFO and MGO LS, rose by 51%
month-on-month in December to 3,127 thousand tons, compared to the 1,271
thousand tons of HSFO sold in the same month.
“The shipping industry has been riddled with market uncertainty
in recent months but the bunker sales in the port of Singapore provide
one of the first readings as to how the industry has transitioned into
compliance with the IMO2020 regulation,” Peter Sand, BIMCO’s Chief Shipping Analyst, commented.
“We have now surpassed the first wave of IMO2020 and hopefully
the accompanying market uncertainty will diminish as we proceed into
2020.”
The shift in bunker sales
In December, a total of 2,630 thousand tons of LSFO were sold,
accounting for 59% of total sales. This is a massive change considering
that it accounted for roughly 1% of total sales in the last 2 couple of
years.
However, the total 2019 bunker sales in Singapore were down 4% year-on-year, the lowest level since 2015.
The December figures provide insight into the IMO2020 transition and
how the upcoming year might unfold. At the start of 2019, low-sulfur
fuels accounted for a mere 8% of total sales compared with a jump to 70%
in December.
“The massive uptick in market share of low-sulphur fuels
illustrate the first wave of IMO2020, but BIMCO does not necessarily
expect the low-sulphur to high-sulphur sales ratio to remain at these
levels in the coming year,” the association added.
While low-sulfur fuels have gained the largest market share, it is
worth noticing how HSFO still accounts for 28% of total sales, driven by
bunkers purchased for scrubber-fitted ships. Many of the
scrubber-fitted ships are also the largest types of ships consuming
relatively more fuel, which will surely facilitate stable demand for
HSFO.
The bunker market in the port of Rotterdam, approximately one-sixth
of the size of the Singaporean market, exhibited the same trend in
November. Here, the sale of HSFO declined substantially while low-sulfur
fuels rose to 50% of total bunker sales.
The shift in bunker sales underlines the massive transition that the
shipping industry has been faced with at the turn of the decade. For the
first wave of the transition, the global fleet seems to have bunkered
sufficiently. A second wave is expected to set into motion once the
fleet has burned through the initial supply of low-sulfur fuels.
VLSFO – the silver bullet for IMO2020?
An array of different compliant distillates has emerged in the market to facilitate compliance.
While the IMO2020 sets out a regulatory framework for the shipping
industry, it does not issue mandatory uniform requirements for the
properties of distillate blends. To some degree, this contributes to the uncertainty regarding bunker incompatibility.
As explained, two different fuel blends with the same specifications
are not necessarily compatible. Bunkering VLSFO from a bunker supplier
in one port is not necessarily compatible with VLSFO bunkered in
another.
VLSFO has been labeled as the silver bullet for the IMO2020 market.
Yet, up until the fourth quarter of 2019, VLSFO was only available in a
few select ports, but at an attractive price discount to MGO LS.
However, In December 2019, the MGO LS and VLSFO reached price parity
in Singapore, seemingly on the back of higher demand for VLSFO.
The rising cost of low-sulfur fuels illustrates the massive challenge
that shipowners have been faced with overnight. At current price
spreads, fuel oil costs have effectively doubled, putting heavy
financial pressure on companies that must bear the cost burden
themselves. The first-mover advantage associated with scrubbers seems to
hold true for the time being, according to BIMCO.
“Almost from one day to another, IMO2020 has resulted in a
massive increase in bunkering costs for shipowners and operators, costs
which for many companies cannot be sustained for a prolonged period.
Shipowners are trying to pass on the additional costs of bunkering to
customers, but if the underlying supply and demand fundamentals are not
balanced, their efforts may prove futile,” Sand continued.
While the industry adjusts to the new reality of IMO2020, another
crucial part of the regulation is approaching hastily. On March 1,
2020, the high-sulfur fuel oil carriage ban takes effect, which prohibits ships without a scrubber to even carry bunker fuels with sulfur content above 0.50%.