Marine fuel sales at the UAE Fujairah port fell sharply to a fresh low in March after the US-Iran conflict disrupted supply and demand in the key Middle Eastern bunker hub, according to latest data and trade sources.
Located in the Gulf of
Oman, just outside the Strait of Hormuz, Fujairah is a key refuelling point
for ships carrying oil and fuel out of the region, said Reuters.
Bunker sales, excluding lubricants,
totalled 158,852 cubic metres (about 157,300 metric tonnes) in March, the lowest on record, according to data
from the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone published by S&P Global Energy and historical data
available since 2021.
Volumes were down more
than 70 per cent from February as well as the same month last year.
The bunkering market
in Fujairah remains constrained so far in April due to slow demand, UAE-based
traders said, while few suppliers have available cargoes to offer.
"The ongoing
conflict continues to choke trade and subsequently we are seeing demand
destruction," marine fuel trader Dan-Bunkering said in a report this week,
adding that cargo supply chains are pressured.
Heavy fuel inventories
in the Fujairah storage hub fell to a record low recently, hitting 3.91 million
barrels in the week to April 13, per data from the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone.
Some oil loading
operations in Fujairah were partially halted in March after
infrastructure attacks,
while ships also avoided the port due to risks linked to taking
bunkers there, trade sources said.
Neighbouring port Khor
Fakkan, which has drawn some demand away from Fujairah in recent years, has
also seen muted demand over the past few weeks, a trader
active in the market there said.
Refuelling demand has
instead diverted to bunker ports in other regions such as Asia, with Singapore
logging stronger volumes in the first two weeks of the war.