Purvin & Gertz Residual Fuel Market Outlook

November 6, 2009

Purvin & Gertz announced the completion of the Residual Fuel Market Outlook: Impact of Bunker Quality Changes on Marine Fuels & Refining. This comprehensive study includes an analysis of the issues, balances and economics of bunker fuel, stationary fuel oil and residual refinery feedstocks.

Emissions limits agreed by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and rapidly being adopted by nations will change marine bunker fuel qualities and indeed the type of fuel consumed. This report provides insight into the complex inter-industry compliance issue. The possible adoption of onboard ship scrubbing is analyzed in the study through two compliance scenarios, each providing a complete balance and pricing analysis.

For each compliance scenario, the study includes:
  --  Balances for 13 world regions and estimates of stationary fuel quality
  --  Detailed bunker, diesel and fuel oil balances
  --  Bunker supply economics for new ECA and global bunker fuel qualities
  --  Price forecasts for current and future quality residual and distillate
      marine fuels
  --  Refinery capacity and projects
  --  Carbon emissions from refinery and ship compliance options
  --  Influence on crude differentials and refining margins

(www.purvingertz.com)
 

Logistics News

Stolt-Nielsen Limited Shares Q2, H1 2026 Results

Stolt-Nielsen Limited Shares Q2, H1 2026 Results

Tanker Vessel Contracting Hits Record High

Tanker Vessel Contracting Hits Record High

Concordia Damen to Build Two River Cruise Vessels for TUI River Cruise

Concordia Damen to Build Two River Cruise Vessels for TUI River Cruise

HDI Global US Restructures Underwriting Leadership

HDI Global US Restructures Underwriting Leadership

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

BETA is the flight control system of choice for Horizon Aircraft in Canada
Oil tanker traffic in Hormuz is near a standstill due to attacks that strain Iran's truce
US power companies scramble for equipment to meet the surge in demand from data centers