Occidental Tentatively Fixes VLCC for Record $13.25 mln to Asia

October 7, 2019

Occidental Petroleum Corp provisionally chartered a supertanker to ship U.S. crude to South Korea for a new record of $13.25 million in November, three shipping sources familiar with the matter said on Monday.

The Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC) Maran Andromeda was chartered by Occidental on Friday for an estimated Nov. 20 departure, according to one shipbroker and Refinitiv Eikon shipping data.

Global shipping rates, and in particular U.S. Gulf Coast to Asia <TD-LPP-SIN>, have skyrocketed after the United States in late September imposed sanctions on two units of China's COSCO, alleging involvement in ferrying crude out of Iran.

U.S. Gulf Coast exporters have held back on chartering COSCO-linked vessels and scrambled to replace those already on charter over the past two weeks, traders and shipbrokers said.

Occidental is one of the biggest exporters of U.S. crude and routinely ships to Asian buyers, trade sources said. The company did not respond to requests for comment.

A fully loaded VLCC can carry between 1.9 million and 2.2 million barrels of crude oil.

A different supertanker owned by Maran Tankers could also be used for Occidental's cargo if the Andromeda cannot be chartered, two shipping sources said.

Freight rates for U.S. Gulf Coast to China remained elevated at about $13 million on Monday, according to data from shipbroker McQuilling Services.

Reporting by Collin Eaton and Devika Krishna Kumar

Logistics News

Argentina Trucker Protest Delays at Least 10 Ships at Port Waiting to Load Grain

Argentina Trucker Protest Delays at Least 10 Ships at Port Waiting to Load Grain

DSV Delivers Petrochemical Columns to ORLEN

DSV Delivers Petrochemical Columns to ORLEN

UK’s Portland Port Expands Services with LNG Transfer Capability

UK’s Portland Port Expands Services with LNG Transfer Capability

Golden Pass Texas Facility Ready for Inaugural LNG Export

Golden Pass Texas Facility Ready for Inaugural LNG Export

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Iran has not yet decided whether it will attend the talks as the ceasefire deadline approaches
Hormuz shipping traffic is still mostly halted
Sources say that the Russian Tuapse refinery has ceased operations following a drone attack on April 16.