Abu Dhabi Port Eases Restrictions on Tankers Going to and from Qatar

June 7, 2017

Abu Dhabi port authorities have eased restrictions on oil tankers going to and from Qatar, according to industry sources and shipping circulars seen by Reuters on Wednesday.


Abu Dhabi Petroleum Ports Authority issued a new circular on Wednesday removing previous restrictions on non-Qatar owned, flagged or operated vessels sailing to and from Qatar.


This effectively allows direct trade between the two ports and co-loading of crude cargoes, a Singapore-based shipbroker said.


A Middle East-based industry source said there had been no official notification on halting the co-loading of crude cargoes.


The ban on vessels carrying the Qatari flag and vessels owned or operated by Qatar is still in place, according to the circular.


But given there are few Qatari-flagged or owned vessels, this is unlikely to have as big an impact on the market as the previous circular, the shipbroker added.


Reuters reported on Wednesday two very large crude carriers (VLCCs), which can each carry up to 2 million barrels of oil, loaded Abu Dhabi grades on Wednesday, despite having taken Qatari crude in an earlier leg of the voyage.


On Monday, Saudi Arabia's Ports Authority told shipping agents not to accept vessels flying the Qatari flag or ships owned by Qatari companies or individuals, it said on its Twitter account, adding that Qatari goods would be barred from unloading in Saudi ports.


On Wednesday, Saudi's Ras Tanura oil port issued a notice stressing the restrictions issued earlier by the Saudi Ports Authority, according to a copy seen by Reuters.


On Monday, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain severed ties including all air, land and sea transport links with Qatar, accusing it of supporting terrorism. Doha denies the accusation.


(Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan, Roslan Khasawneh in Singapore, Rania El Gamal in Dubai and Reem Shamseddine in Khobar)

Logistics News

Port of Antwerp-Bruges Reports Weak Start to the Year

Port of Antwerp-Bruges Reports Weak Start to the Year

Hydrogen Fuel Cell Harbor Craft Pilot Study Launched in Singapore

Hydrogen Fuel Cell Harbor Craft Pilot Study Launched in Singapore

BIMCO Warns of Hormuz Toll Scam

BIMCO Warns of Hormuz Toll Scam

HPH Trust Unveils Hong Kong’s First Autonomous Truck Fleet

HPH Trust Unveils Hong Kong’s First Autonomous Truck Fleet

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Russian diplomats denounce new EU sanctions
Tinubu, the Nigerian leader, seeks approval from Parliament for a $516 million road loan
Stocks close lower on fading hopes for quick Iran deal, mixed quarterly earnings