Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Half of all copper mining is at drought risk with climate change

Bloomberg News | April 29, 2024 | 5:08 pm Energy Intelligence Africa Canada Latin America USA Copper

Zambia’s copper mines are facing a power supply squeeze as drought roils hydroelectric installations. Pictured: Sentinel open-pit copper mine. (Image courtesy of First Quantum Minerals.)

As projections for all the copper needed in the clean-energy transition help send prices of the wiring metal to two-year highs, a new report highlights the risks to future metal supplies from climate change.


Even in an optimistic low emission scenario for 2050, more than half the world’s copper mines will be in areas exposed to drought risk that’s deemed significant, high or extreme, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP report. For two other energy transition metals — lithium and cobalt — drought exposure is even higher at 74%, the study found.

Copper has rallied in recent months to surpass $10,000 a metric ton, fueled by bets on looming shortages as mines struggle to meet rising demand from electric vehicles, grid infrastructure and data centers. New deposits are getting harder and costlier to extract while growing scrutiny of environmental and social issues also are discouraging investment.

Climate related disruptions would add another layer of supply risk. While the effects of rising temperatures and shifting weather patterns are widely documented for agricultural commodities, the impact on minerals is less known. Zambia’s copper mines are facing a power supply squeeze as drought roils hydroelectric installations. In Chile, water shortages have restrained copper production in recent years as the industry invests in the use of seawater.

For each of the nine commodities in the PwC study, at least 40% of global supply is produced from no more than three countries. In the case of copper, Chile, Peru and China account for more than half of production.

“That means that if climate change disrupts, it can have a disproportionate effect because you’ve not got that spread,” Emma Cox, global climate leader at PwC UK, said in an interview. “I don’t think everybody understands the dependencies and the impacts of a future change in climate.”

(By James Attwood)



China’s Zhaojin wins control of Tietto Minerals in $475 million deal

Tietto, which is Australian listed and headquartered, produces gold from its Abujar project in Ivory Coast.

Reuters | April 30, 2024 | 

Aerial view of the Abujar gold mine in Ivory Coast. Credit: Tietto Minerals

China’s Zhaojin Capital has won control of Australia’s Tietto Minerals after a protracted six months takeover tussle that values the gold producer at A$733 million ($474.62 million), according to a regulatory filing on Wednesday.



Zhaojin Capital, a unit of Hong Kong-listed Zhaojin Mining, now has 52.8% voting power, it said in the filing, up from 42.5% previously.


Tietto, which is Australian listed and headquartered, produces gold from its Abujar project in Ivory Coast.

Zhaojin’s victory to control more than half the company comes a day after the Tietto’s board called upon its shareholders to accept Zhaojin’s takeover bid.

The original offer of A$0.58 per share was increased on April 15 to A$0.68 per share and declared “best and final”, which meant Zhaojin could not increase its bid again.

Tietto’s board said it believed the bid still undervalued the company, but given key shareholders had accepted the offer it would change its official recommendation.

Tietto chairman Francis Harper, CEO Matthew Wilcox and non-executive director Paul Kitto said in a filing they intended to sell their stock on market if the price was not very different to Zhaojin’s offer. The trio will accept the Zhaojin offer if it is higher than the market price when the offer closes, they added.

Tietto had said earlier that two of its major shareholders might have accepted the Chinese suitor’s offer after a significant jump in the latter’s voting power to more than 42% as of April 29.

If the deal goes through, the takeover would help Zhaojin expand its mining operations overseas. The Chinese company has already received approval from Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board.

($1 = 1.5444 Australian dollars)

(By Scott Murdoch and Poonam Behura; Editing by Pooja Desai, Rashmi Aich and Jamie Freed)
Brazil Potash aims to beat Russian, Canadian suppliers on price

Reuters | April 30, 2024 | 


Fertilizer in a farmer’s hand. Credit: Brazil Potash.

The cost to produce potash from a mine being developed in the Brazilian Amazon will be similar to Russia’s and lower than in No. 1 producer Canada, said the CEO of Brazil Potash Corp, citing a third-party assessment used in a company presentation.


The economics of the project — which faced a protracted licensing process involving multiple government agencies and Indigenous consultations — has drawn analysts’ attention after the price of potash fell sharply from highs above $1,000 per metric ton amid the threat of sanctions against Russia and Belarus in 2022, compared to the current level just above $300.

That, and new mining projects emerging in Canada and Laos, would likely keep a lid on prices, they said.

“All in, our cost to mine, process and deliver the potash to farmers in Mato Grosso state will be $130 per ton,” CEO Matt Simpson said in an interview on Monday, breaking down production cost in Brazil at $80 per ton and transportation at $50 per ton.

According to a separate price assessment, Russia’s extraction cost is estimated at $50 and Canada’s at $80, Simpson said. That would make the company’s Brazil potash less competitive than Russia’s and “in line” with Canada’s, he conceded.

Brazil relies on imports for nearly 100% of supplies, which come from nations like Canada and Russia.

Simpson noted freight tied to potash imports alone was higher than the total cost for the company, whose mine is significantly closer to local farmers.

In a presentation sent to Reuters, the company’s potash price in Brazil was forecast to be $459 on a cost-and-freight (CFR) basis, which seemed high to analysts who spoke to Reuters.

Simpson said that projection should be understood as an average over the mine’s life span, conservatively calculated at 23 years. He also cited 15 million tons of additional global demand for potash in the next eight years.

“There’s going to be a six-to-seven million ton shortfall in new supply versus demand that is going to cause a structural shift up of roughly $100 a ton,” he said, predicting Brazil’s potash price could be $400 or $500 by 2032.

Brazil Potash aims to produce 2.4 million tons per year, a fifth of national demand, and will target Mato Grosso farmers primarily.

The company also hopes to make direct sales, eliminating blenders, which Simpson said charge $50 to $70 premiums from buyers.

Production at the Amazon mine, which has 4 of 11 required licences to complete construction, is scheduled to start in 2029, Simpson said.

(By Ana Mano; Editing by Josie Kao)

 

From EVs to Wind Turbines, China is Winning the Clean-Energy War

BYD Explorer No. 1 departs on its maiden voyage (BYD)
The car carrier BYD Explorer No. 1 departs on its maiden voyage to deliver EVs to Europe (Image courtesy BYD)

PUBLISHED APR 29, 2024 10:40 PM BY G. ALLEN BROOKS

 

(Article originally published in Jan/Feb 2024 edition.)

 

The EPA has finalized its tailpipe emissions rules for light-duty vehicles beginning in 2027. When initially proposed, the rule sparked pushback from the automobile industry, among others. As the EPA noted, the rule would require electric vehicles to make up 67 percent of new vehicle sales by 2032. 

For perspective, EV sales in the U.S. last year reached a record of 1.2 million vehicles, a 7.6 percent market share, up from 5.9 percent in 2022. To achieve the Biden Administration’s goal of two-thirds of new car sales being electric, EVs’ market share must increase by 60 percentage points over nine years – a questionable undertaking. 

Annual auto sales average about 17 million units. Meeting the EPA’s goal requires a 10-fold EV output increase to nearly 12 million a year. This will require huge auto industry investments in new assembly plants, battery plants, mines and processing facilities for the critical minerals needed for EVs.  Those minerals – cobalt, graphite, lithium, manganese, nickel and copper ? are in short supply and mostly located outside North America. This means finding mineral deposits around the world and building extensive new supply chains in a short time. 

Late to the Party

The U.S. is late to the EV party, and its efforts to catch up are running into resistance. 

EV sales have largely targeted the luxury car market, which is limited in size. With an underdeveloped EV charging network and many potential buyers not being able to install home-charging stations, buyers are hesitant. 

In addition, EVs are expensive and have limited driving range, which can necessitate charging away from home. They’ve performed poorly in cold weather and are costly to insure and expensive to repair. These hurdles have combined to suddenly slow domestic EV sales – to the dismay of auto executives who were investing billions in new plants as their losses on EVs grew. 

The sales slowdown is not limited to the U.S. but has been experienced in Europe and China, the world’s number one EV market. For years, the subsidies-driven boom helped China sell more EVs than Europe and the U.S. combined. The subsidy reduction and consumer spending slowdown meant China’s EV growth rate fell below those of Europe and the U.S. With surplus EV manufacturing capacity, China has set in motion a global expansion strategy. 

Global EV Domination?

China is now targeting domination of the global EV market, and why not? If Western governments are determined to rapidly shift away from fossil fuels to renewables, China wants to be the supplier of the cheapest tools to facilitate the move. What would be good for Westerners – cheaper renewable energy products – would be good for China’s economy. 

Last year China’s BYD, backed by Warren Buffet of Berkshire Hathaway fame, passed Tesla as the world’s largest EV company. China is riding the nation’s EV boom to revolutionize the car business and leave traditional automakers in the dust. Legacy auto company executives acknowledge that Chinese EV companies are 30 percent faster in developing new EVs. 

Rather than following the traditional new model development protocol, these Chinese companies have embraced working on many phases of EV development at once. They’re willing to substitute smaller, faster suppliers for traditional ones. They run more virtual tests instead of time-consuming mechanical ones. And they’ve redefined when a model is ready for the market. 

Western automakers admit they’re chasing the Chinese auto companies, once considered also-rans. However, the fear now is that Chinese EV companies may flood the market with cheap EVs at a time when demand is slowing. Financial losses would explode. 

NIO, one of China’s leading EV manufacturers, takes less than 36 months from the start of a project to delivery to customers. That’s a year quicker than traditional auto manufacturers. Zeekr, an EV venture of Chinese auto giant Geely, can develop EV models in 24 months. Part of their strategy is to develop various models – SUVs, multipurpose vehicles and hatchbacks – that share the same manufacturing and digital architecture with other Geely brands such as Polestar and Smart. 

Another characteristic of the Chinese EV market is the rapid development of new models and the refreshment of older models. Chinese buyers tend to favor the latest models. According to China’s passenger car association, car models launched last year contributed 90 percent of the nation’s passenger car sales growth. 

An analysis by AlixPartners shows that “domestic EV makers offer models for sale for an average of 1.3 years before they are updated or refreshed, compared with 4.2 years for foreign brands.” 

Instead of being also-rans, Chinese EV companies are being mimicked and even partnered with for their skills rather than as a ticket to enter China’s auto market. Tesla’s Elon Musk and Ford’s CEO, Jim Farley, have warned that their biggest future threats will be from Chinese EV companies.  Germany’s Volkswagen is partnering with Chinese EV companies seeking to speed up its design and manufacturing processes. The head of Volkswagen’s China subsidiary noted that it traditionally took four years to bring a new model to market compared with 2½ years for Chinese EV companies. 

NIO, once considered to be China’s Tesla-killer, has redefined when a model is ready for market by utilizing “minimum viable products,” which means they build their EVs with more advanced chips, cameras or sensors than their software can support at the time. Once it has developed the new technology to utilize all the unused capabilities, the vehicle is sent software updates over the air. 

Solar and Wind Leadership

As China works to dominate the global EV market, it already dominates the solar panel market. It secured access to that technology from European manufacturers and then capitalized on the country’s cheap labor, power and abundant polysilicon supply to undercut competitors. 

China now controls 80 percent of the solar panel market and has plans to build more than 1,000 gigawatts of N-type cell capacity, the next generation after P-type, which will be 17 times the capacity of competitors. This market dominance results in Chinese modules costing half that of those made in Europe and two-thirds less than U.S. panels.

Is it any wonder solar subsidies and tariffs are needed in Europe and the U.S. to compete? 

When it comes to wind turbines, China controls nearly 60 percent of the global market, largely because it has been installing significant generating capacity and also because the country’s policy is to make renewable energy a foundation for economic growth. In 2022, ten of the world’s top 15 wind turbine manufacturers were Chinese, and they delivered 56 percent of the units installed. Having provided two-thirds of the 156 GW of capacity installed last year, China’s global market share further increased. 

Too Little, Too Late?

Western countries are trying to protect and grow domestic competitors to China in all three markets – EVs, solar panels and wind turbines. From government investigations into Chinese manufacturers anticompetitive actions to installing high tariffs and outright restrictions on access to local markets, Western governments are battling a Chinese commercial invasion. 

At risk are jobs, capital investments and tax revenues, along with potential national security implications. Recent renewable energy market slowdowns and turmoil have only helped strengthen China’s hand as its actions are blessed by its government, which is looking to the long-term for these industries to underpin the country’s economy. 

This economic policy battle will generate unintended consequences that we will only see when they emerge. The biggest loser will be Western consumers forced to buy more expensive items.  

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Maritime Executive.


Graphite miners lobby US govt to impose

 

levy on China-sourced EV material


Reuters | April 30, 2024 | 

The Lac des Iles mine in Quebec (LDI) is the only graphite producer in North America. (Image courtesy of Northern Graphite.)

North American graphite miners are lobbying the US government to impose a 25% tariff on three graphite products sourced from China in order to counter Beijing’s monopoly on a key material used in automobile batteries.


If successful, the move will pit the miners against their main customers- the original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and add to tensions with China, which controls the majority of the critical metals used in the world’s electric vehicles and other motors.

The US government is set to decide in May whether to bring graphite into the list of minerals that attract the higher Section 301 tariff.

The Section 301 tariff was introduced by former US President Donald Trump after his administration found China’s “acts, policies and practices related to technology transfer, intellectual property, and innovation are unreasonable and discriminatory”. Many other parts used in electric vehicles are also subjected to additional levies. China has called US 301 tariffs on its imports “discriminatory”.

Graphite was exempted because China accounts for 70% of global output of the material – used to make electric battery anodes, the negatively charged portion of the battery.


The graphite manufacturers depend on offtake agreements with automakers as a basis to raise capital from lenders, but if OEMs can secure cheaper graphite from China, there is no need for them to sign these offtake agreements.

The OEM lobby group opposes the higher tariff and argues that without a credible supply chain from North America it is forced to depend on China, and tariffs make them uncompetitive against Chinese auto makers.

The United States Trade Representative, the body responsible for imposing the levy, did not respond to a Reuters query on the inclusion of China-sourced graphite in the Section 301 list.

Graphite miners told Reuters that allowing the free flow of graphite from China into North America harms their chances of raising capital as auto makers would shun future offtake agreements if they could source graphite from China cheaply.

“If we don’t secure the project financing… we won’t be able to build a north American supply chain,” said Hugues Jacquemin, CEO of Montreal-based Northern Graphite.

Critical minerals such as lithium and graphite have become a flash point as western countries try and reduce their reliance on China for these metals that are key for energy transition.

In October last year Beijing imposed controls on graphite exports from the country to help “better safeguard national security and interests”.

Japan, the United States, India and South Korea are top buyers of China’s graphite according to its customs data.

“Trade protections must be enacted to blunt the effects of China’s ability to overproduce graphite and effectively control the global market,” said Erik Olson, spokesperson of North American Graphite Alliance, a group of Canadian and American graphite producers.

(By Divya Rajagopal; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)


Australia cracks down on foreign investment in critical minerals

Bloomberg News | April 30, 2024 | 


China’s Tianqi controls Greenbushes, the world’s biggest hard-rock lithium mine, located about 250 km from Perth, Australia. (Image courtesy of Tianqi.)

Australia will tighten scrutiny of foreign investment into mining and refining of critical minerals as part of an overhaul of its national regime, while speeding up approvals in low-risk areas to boost economic growth.


Treasurer Jim Chalmers will announce the changes in a speech to the Lowy Institute think tank in Sydney on Wednesday, saying Australia welcomes international investment “but only if it’s in our national interest.”

“Foreign investment is where the stovepipes of economic and national security have often failed to meet in the past,” he will say, according to excerpts released in advance. The government estimates direct and portfolio foreign investment in Australia’s economy grew to about A$3.5 trillion ($2.3 trillion) in 2023.

The treasurer pointed to “foreign investment in critical infrastructure, critical minerals, critical technology” as a focus for efforts to apply greater scrutiny to international funding. Since coming to office, Chalmers has blocked some investment by Chinese-linked companies in Australia’s critical minerals and rare earths industries.

China’s tight grip on the critical minerals supply chain, such as lithium and rare earths processing and refining, has prompted Australia to work with allies including the US, Japan and South Korea in recent years. This latest move by Chalmers builds on the momentum to date.

At the same time, Chalmers said the investment approval process would be streamlined for known investors and low-risk sectors, including a new target for Treasury to process 50% of cases within 30 days from the start of 2025.

The government will release an updated foreign investment policy document on Wednesday to guide investors on the new processes, including which parts of the economy will face tougher screening.

The government will also allow foreign investors to purchase established build-to-rent properties as part of a plan to increase demand and create incentives for more construction.

(By Ben Westcott)


IMPROVE PAY & BENEFITS

Hamburg Pleads With Port Workers to Say No to Drug Smugglers

Smugglers
Bags containing cocaine in a containerized shipment of tobacco, 2019 (Hauptzollamt Hamburg)

PUBLISHED APR 29, 2024 7:00 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

 

Hamburg's port is one of the main gateways for cocaine smuggling into Europe, a prized market for cartels because of the popularity of the drug and the high price it fetches. While Hamburg is not as busy as Rotterdam or Antwerp, it is still a regional hub, and local authorities are trying to crack down on the illicit trade - in part, by appealing to port employees to stay out of the smuggling industry. 

"Stay away from this type of crime, give information if you notice something, it protects yourself, it protects our port and it protects our urban society," Hamburg mayor Peter Tschentscher warned port personnel in comments to local media on Monday. 

Inside collaborators (or "internal harbor criminals") are essential to the smooth functioning of a narcotics smuggling network. Port employees can help gang members gain unauthorized access to storage yards; access yard location databases to help retrieve drugs from "dirty" containers; and tip off criminals to signs of law enforcement activity. Gangs use a variety of methods to gain leverage over port staff, including extortion, threats of violence and generous bribe offers for compliance. 

"If you get involved in it, you might find that the whole family gets involved," Tschentscher warned. 

The cautionary message is part of a broader EU-backed push to counter smuggling networks in Northern Europe, called the INOK project ("Infiltration of North Sea Ports by Organised Crime"). In addition to the awareness campaign, INOK aims to investigate and prosecute corrupt port employees; protect innocent employees from ever being contacted by cartel members; and strengthen ties with maritime companies, who can help to quickly spot and close vulnerabilities on the waterfront. 

The scale of the problem is significant. In Antwerp, authorities seized a record 116 tonnes of cocaine in 2023. Germany's federal police force is working with the ports of Rotterdam and Antwerp to ensure that when there is a crackdown in these key ports, the trade does not simply spill over into Port of Hamburg. (Hamburg already has plenty to contend with: officials there seized 35 tonnes last year). 

By weight, cocaine is worth more than platinum when delivered to the EU. The median wholesale price per kilo on the European market is about $37,000, or $37 per gram. When reduced in purity and sold to the end user, the price rises to an average of about $75 per gram - about the same as the price of pure gold. At the point of origin in Colombia, the same drug is worth $2-3,000 per kilo wholesale ($2-3 per gram), so the markup is more than an order of magnitude. There are few other industries with such a substantial opportunity for profit, even after accounting for product losses due to the occasional intercept and seizure.

 

Bibby Marine Orders First Battery and Methanol Powered eCSOV

electric offshore vessel
Bibby has ordered a CSOV that will use batteries and methanol fuel to be zero emissions in UK demonstration project (Bibby)

PUBLISHED APR 30, 2024 6:04 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

 

A shipbuilding contract has been completed for what is being called the “world’s first truly zero-emission, electric Commission Service Operation Vessel,” which is being built as part of UK sponsored demonstration project. The ship is expected to enter service in the UK in 2026 using a combination of a powerful battery system along with dual-fuel methanol engines.

A coalition of leading maritime companies led by Bibby Marine proposed the project as part of the UK’s Zero Emission Vessels and Infrastructure (ZEVI) project staged by the UK Department of Transportation. A total of £80 million was awarded to 10 projects in the 2022 round with the Bibby effort being awarded $25 million. They estimated the cost of the project for the vessel at $37.5 million total.

Bibby Marine reports that it completed a tender process and has selected Gondan to build the vessel. The Asturias shipyard in Spain won out of a variety of yards in the UK and internationally. Bibby cites the timeline, budget, and quality reputation as the deciding factors in the tender.

In the project proposal, the team called for a 295-foot vessel that would be primarily powered by electricity and batteries and have dual-fuel methanol-powered engines as backup. The ship will be ready for offshore charging and can recharge its batteries at night.

“The delivery of this vessel has the potential to be a game changer for our industry by accelerating our path to net zero, as well as showcasing marine innovation at its finest,” said Nigel Quinn, CEO of Bibby Marine. “This project will demonstrate that clean ships can be built at the same total cost of ownership as a conventional fossil burning vessel, coupled with significantly reduced operating costs.” 

The eCSOV, which has been designed in collaboration with UK-based ship designers Longitude. To facilitate zero-emission operations, the eCSOV will feature high-voltage offshore charging facilities for rapid recharging. The vessel will have the capability to operate solely on battery power for over 16 hours between charging cycles.

Describing the project in their application for the funding grant, the team said they expect that it will be possible to operate the vessel with a two-week cycle onsite at an offshore wind farm emissions-free. Near shore and onsite the vessel will operate solely on battery power. For the longer transits between the shore homeports and the wind farms, the vessel will use its methanol fuel engines.

One of the challenges that ZEVI also looks to address is the need for offshore charging capabilities. In the application, the group said the CSOV would still achieve a 50 percent reduction in emissions compared to a conventional SOV, if offshore charging is not available


France’s TOWT Expands Sail Cargo Plans Ordering Six Additional Ships

sail cargo ship
TOWT's first two vessels are nearing completion to enter service in the coming months (TOWT)

PUBLISHED APR 29, 2024 5:13 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

French sail shipping company TOWT (TransOceanic Wind Transport) announced ambitious growth plans for its vision of carbon-free cargo shipping. Even before the company launches its first two dedicated vessels in the coming months, they report strong demand and supported by leading investors ordered six additional vessels. They also shared a grand vision of 500 ships by 2050.

The concept is to transport niche cargoes in dedicated vessels that will be large enough to be economically viable. They point out that while current sail cargo operations are 35-ton vessels, the two ships now under construction in Vietnam at the Piriou shipyard will each be 1,000 tons. Each vessel is 260 feet in length with two mats and will be able to carry 1,100 tons of cargo. TOWT forecasts that the vessel will carry up to 20,000 tons of goods per year.

Today they are reporting the order of six additional vessels also to be built by the Piriou group. Three vessels should be ready for service in 2026 and the others in 2027. By 2028, the company forecasts it could have annual revenues of €60 million and the capacity to transport 200,000 tonnes annually.

 

First two sail cargo ships will launch in June and July 2024 (TOWT)

 

"After two intense years of work, we are extremely happy and proud to take this significant step in the history of TOWT. With the construction of these 6 additional cargo sailboats, we are consolidating our position as a pioneer in the transport of goods by sail by increasing our fleet to 8 ships,” said Diana Mesa, co-founder and director general, and Guillaume Le Grand, co-founder and President of TOWT.

TOWT says each vessel will be moved by a set of sails with over 23,000 sq. feet of sail area providing speeds of approximately 10 knots. Operations will reduce carbon emissions by 95 percent compared to conventional cargo ships and they report strong interest from shippers.

The first two vessels, ordered in late 2021, are nearing completion with the masts having recently been raised on both ships. The company’s published schedule calls for Artemis to enter service in late June and Anemos in early July. The service will be primarily between Le Havre, France and New York as well as sailings to Colombia, Brazil, and Guadeloupe. 

Atlantic crossings between Le Havre, France and New York are expected to take about two weeks. In addition to the cargo, the vessels will be able to carry up to 12 passengers and operate with a crew of seven.

 

 

The company has been operating chartered sailing ships for 13 years and reports it has already transported more than two million products. They report having chartered 20 vessels and operating 70 trips. Recently they completed a new round of funding from well-known investors including Révolution Environnementale et Solidaire fund, Atlante Gestion, the Caisse des Deposits and Consignments, CIC, and Bpifrance. The general public also contributed €5 million coming from around 2,000 individuals.

The company reports the additional vessels will permit it to increase capacity and accelerate the frequency of departures. Their target is weekly sailings. They also look to open new routes with dedicated additional ships to Asia, Africa, and additional countries in South America.
 

Qatar Orders 18 World’s Largest LNG Carries in $6B Deal with China's CSSC

largest LNG carrier
Rendering of the new QC-Max which will be the largest LNG carriers (CSSC)

PUBLISHED APR 29, 2024 3:18 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

Qatar Energy and China State Shipbuilding Corporation are heralding an order for 18 of the world’s largest LNG carriers as the next phase in their relationship and support of the expansion of Qatar’s LNG operations. With the order valued at nearly $6 billion, it is being cited as possibly the largest single LNG order and one of the largest ever placed in the industry.

The new vessels will be part of an expanded QC-MAX size LNG carrier with a capacity of 271,000 cubic meters in five tanks. The current Q-Max vessels operating for Qatar have a capacity between 263,000 and 266,000 cubic meters of LNG. Qatar recently highlighted the bulk of the shipbuilding orders, which reached a total of 104 vessels, are the conventional size with a capacity of 174,000 cubic meters. Qatar Energy has also called the program the largest shipbuilding and leasing program in the history of the industry.

The order expands on the earlier reports in January 2024 that Qatar was building eight of the QC-Max class vessels in China. The order signed today calls for the first eight vessels to be delivered in 2028 and 2029, The other 10 vessels added to the order will be delivered in 2030 and 2031. All of them will be built by China’s Hudong-Zhonghua Shipyard. They also highlighted that the yard is already building 12 conventional-size LNG carriers with the first of the vessels due for delivery to Qatar in the third quarter of this year.

Each of the vessels will measure 1,128 feet (344 meters) with a design draft of just over 39 feet (12 meters). CSSC has previously highlighted that these dimensions mean the vessels will still be able to dock at 70 percent of the world’s LNG terminals.

They will use dual-fuel low-speed engines and they are highlighting a range of technological features. While they will increase the carry capacity by 57 percent. The design is optimized with a double skeg line and a lower evaporation rate, which means the vessels’ energy consumption of cargo transportation per ton per nautical mile is 9.9 percent lower than the conventional ships. They are also employing technology with a real-time sloshing monitoring system and a hull configuration stress monitoring system. CSSC says the carbon intensity index (CII) will be 23 lower than the conventional LNG carriers.

The countries highlighted that Qatar Energy is already a large supplier of LNG, crude oil, and other products to China. In 2023, Qatar shipped China 17 million tons of LNG. Sinopec. The Chinese energy company, last year acquired a small stake (less than 2 percent) in two sections of Qatar’s North Field Expansion.

Qatar Energy has also moved to expand relations with other majors including Total, Shell, Eni, and Petronet in advance of the launch of the North Field Expansion. Qatar which has been competing with the United States to be the largest exporter of LNG reports it will expand production by 85 percent by 2030 to a total of 142 million tonnes per annum (mtpa). Earlier this year Qatar Energy announced further expansion plans for the North Field reporting it holds 10 percent of the world’s LNG reserves.

International Group: Russian Oil Price Cap is Unenforceable

Kozmino
Tankers at the Kozmino oil terminal on Russia's Pacific coast. The ESPO blend sold from Kozmino has traded above the price cap since it began (file image)

PUBLISHED APR 29, 2024 8:17 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

The International Group of P&I Clubs has informed the British Parliament that the G7 nations' partial sanctions on Russian oil shipping has become "unenforceable." It confirms longstanding warnings about the "price cap" on the Russian oil trade: it has given rise to a parallel tanker industry outside the cap's boundaries. In this "shadow fleet" of aging ships and murky ownership, there is little oversight of standards and safety - and insurance may only exist on paper. 

The International Group represents 12 of the world's most reputable insurers, covering about 87 percent of all oceangoing merchant tonnage. Its members are subject to the G7 price cap, and since it was implemented, they have lost about 800 tankers in the Russia-serving fleet to less-established insurers outside the G7 - many of which have uncertain financial strength. 

One of the reasons, according to the International Group, is the complicated structure of the cap itself. The price cap allows Western service providers to work with Russian oil cargoes, so long as the cargo is priced below $60 per barrel. Since the P&I insurance provider has no direct knowledge of the cargo's sale price, they are allowed to rely upon the oil trader's attestation alone. If the trader says that the oil was purchased for $59 per barrel, that is good enough for compliance, at least in theory. 

In practice, Russian oil is worth more than $60. Market data shows that the Russian ESPO and Sokol grades have traded above $60 per barrel since before the price cap began. The benchmark Urals grade breached the $60 mark last summer and has largely stayed above it, save for a few brief dips. 

Since all these grades are averaging above $80 per barrel in the aggregate data, there may be reason to question a trader's attestation of a sub-$60 deal. But the details of how the insurer should check up on the accuracy of the attestation are unclear, leading some G7 insurers to turn down Russian oil cargoes even when they appear compliant. 

"The attestation is a flawed regime which potentially exposes both the P&I Club and a shipowner, operator, charterer to a breach," the International Group said. Further, the lack of clarity and possible liability have "resulted in a migration of trade activities outside of the jurisdiction of the G7 and its coalition."

The mechanism only applies to companies within the G7, so the 800-strong "dark fleet" has found safe havens elsewhere. In these new overseas venues, tanker operators and less-established insurers can continue business without trouble from sanctions or safety regulators. 

"The [oil price cap], therefore, appears increasingly unenforceable as more ships and associated services move into this parallel trade," the group concluded. 

These shadowy tankers may still claim to have P&I cover from reputable G7 insurers, even if they do not. "The little piece of paper a dark ship may have that says it’s insured is not worth the paper it’s written on," Simon Lockwood, an executive with insurance broker WTW, told Politico last year. 

In confirmation, Danish authorities recently found that a shadow fleet tanker provided false insurance paperwork after a collision in March. 


Report: Sovcomflot is Renaming and Transferring Flags on More Tankers

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Bloomberg reports Sovcomflot is transferring more tankers to new flags and names (Sovcomflot file photo)

PUBLISHED APR 30, 2024 12:58 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE


Russian shipping company Sovcomflot has reportedly resumed the practice of shuffling around sanctioned tankers in an effort to protect the business. According to a new analysis by Bloomberg, at least four of the tankers have changed names and flags as part of the effort after the recent U.S. sanctions in the enforcement effort of the G7 Price Cap on Russian oil. Sovcomflot has regularly used overseas holding companies that make it difficult to track its fleet.

The report highlights that vessels are swapping flags some going international and others going into the Russian registry all to keep the oil flowing. Analysts have said that Russia is trying to keep the oil on its ships to earn the freight monies. Sovcomflot management had noted while reporting its year-end financial results that the sanctions were complicating the business. Reuters quoted Sovcomflot CEO Igor Tonkovidov as saying that the sanctions were "limiting our geography and commercial prospects."

The U.S. Treasury Department began in late 2023 imposing sanctions and listing vessels that were regularly breaking the price cap. The effort also cited ship managers in locations such as Dubai known to be working with Sovcomflot and then in February directly listed the Russian shipping company. Bloomberg calculates that a total of 21 Sovcomflot tankers have been designated including the 14 named in February. 

The Bloomberg report cites transfers between the Russian flag and Gabon as well as ships moved into the Russian registry. For example, four tankers, Kemerovo (109,900 dwt), Belgorod (156,700 dwt), Kaliningrad (110,000 dwt), and Krasnoyarsk (109,800 dwt) can be seen in databases swapping between the two flags. They are using alternate names of ColumbusBravo, Captain, and Creation while registered in GabonThe vessels were built between 2006 and 2010. Lloyd's List reports Gabon also moved to deflag sanctioned Russian tankers.

Data also shows a strong increase in tonnage for the registry in Gabon. Clarksons highlights that Sovcomflot remains the largest owner of Aframax tankers but the rankings chart shows tonnage registered in Gasbon went from just over 1 million in 2022 to 3 million in 2023 and as of April 1, 2024, is now at 7.4 million GT. They report the number of vessels registered in Gabon has gone from 126 in 2023 to 217 as of April.

After the sanction effort began there were reports that Russian tankers had stropped trips and that India’s refineries, one of the biggest customers were reported pausing shipping on Russian vessels. India’s refineries however have resumed receiving the Russian oil. A report surfaced yesterday that one of the prominent P&I Clubs, International Group, told the British Parliament that the G7 Price Cap has become unenforceable.

Despite the efforts to increase the pressure with the sanctions, Sovcomflot reported for 2023 its net income was just short of $1 billion up by a third. Tonkovidov told reporters that only eight percent of the fleet transporting Russian oil was under the sanctions. Much of the effort has hit at the shadow fleet which consists of older, marginal vessels beyond the Sovcomflot fleet.

WWIII

China Coast Guard Damages Two Philippine Vessels With Water Cannon


On Tuesday, Chinese forces water-cannoned two Philippine patrol vessels near Scarborough Shoal, a longtime flash point in the South China Sea. It is the latest in a string of near-conflict encounters between China's "gray zone" government ships and the Philippine military, driven by China's ownership claim to a large section of the Philippines' Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).

According to the Philippine Coast Guard, the cutter BRP Bagacay and the fishery patrol vessel BRP Bankaw were under way near Scarborough Shoal when they encountered a small flotilla of China Coast Guard and Chinese maritime militia ships. China maintains a constant presence at Scarborough Shoal, which it has controlled since 2012.

At about 0950 hours, the China Coast Guard cutter CCG-3305 used its water cannon to target the starboard quarter of BRP Bankaw, spokesman Commodore Jay Tarriela said. Though not confirmed by Philippine officials, a reporter's video footage appears to show that CCG-3305 also shouldered the Bankaw and used its water cannon at close range to break the radome off Bankaw's satcom terminal.

At about the same time, as BRP Bagacay approached to within 1,000 yards of Scarborough Shoal, two other Chinese cutters used their water cannons to target the Philippine Coast Guard vessel. The PCG cutter reported damage to its topsides, including railings and a cloth canopy, but no personnel were injured. An embarked reporter from UK paper the Telegraph added that the cutter sustained interior flooding and damage to a radar system.

One of the Chinese cutters involved, CCG-5303, is familiar from previous encounters in the South China Sea. It was part of the Chinese presence in Indonesian waters in the Natuna Islands in 2021 and at Second Thomas Shoal in 2022. It has been tailing Philippine vessels near Scarborough Shoal for weeks, according to PCG spokesman Commodore Jay Tarriela.

Under its "nine-dash line" policy, China claims sovereignty over the vast majority of the South China Sea, including waters and land features located hundreds of miles from the Chinese mainland. Most of these claimed areas are located within the exclusive economic zones of neighboring countries, and none have formally accepted it. In 2016, an international tribunal ruled in Manila's favor and found that China's sweeping claims were invalid under international law.  

 

Fisherman Floating in Java Sea Saved by Viken Tanker Managed by Wallem

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Massive tanker spotted a man floating in the sea 12 nm for shore (photo courtesy of Wallem)

PUBLISHED APR 29, 2024 5:54 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

 

Wallem is recounting the heroics of the crew aboard one of the newest tankers it manages. The 110,000 dwt Angleviken, a newly built LNG-fueled crude oil tanker, came across a fisherman floating in the Java Sea for two days in a life ring. 

They miraculously found the man in the water 12 nautical miles from land. The reports are that he told them he jumped from the fishing boat he was working on because he had been working without pay. He was brought aboard safely and both conscious and uninjured.

The master of the Avgleviken, Captain Bhanu Kundi, reportedly sighted an object floating in the water approximately 2.5 nautical miles ahead of the tanker while they were sailing in the Java Sea. He maneuvered the massive 820-foot (250-meter) tanker and sounded the general alarm with a man overboard announcement when they realized it was a person floating in the water.

The crew of Indian, Ukrainian, and Filipino seafarers started the rescue operation. They successfully recovered the man in just 45 minutes from when the alarm was sounded. 

“The crew of Angleviken acted with exemplary speed and discipline to rescue a fellow seafarer in distress within an hour of the first sighting,” said Alexander Ostrovskiy, Senior Marine & Safety Manager, Wallem Group. “We thank them for their professionalism throughout this incident, and for once more demonstrating their over-riding commitment to the protection of life at sea.”

Wallem has been managing the tanker which is registered in Liberia since it entered service in 2023. As an LNG-fueled crude oil tanker it is one of the newest and most advanced vessels in the fleet.