Thu 17 Dec 2020 12:32

Singapore sales up despite 5% less bunker calls


November volume rose 4.6% YoY, whilst bunker calls fell by 178.


Merlion statue, located at Merlion Park, adjacent to One Fullerton at the Marina Bay waterfront, Singapore.
Image: Flickr
Singapore recorded its highest monthly bunker sales figure since March in November, according to data released by the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA).

With an overall bunker volume of 4.263m tonnes, sales in November were up year-on-year (YoY) by 186,900 tonnes, or 4.6 percent. In a month-on-month (MoM) comparison, the figure represents a rise of 110,100 tonnes, or 2.7 percent.

Sales of Singapore's best-selling product, VLSFO 380 centistoke (cSt), declined by 189,300 tonnes, or 8.5 percent, to 2.044m tonnes compared to the previous month; and higher-sulphur MFO 380 recorded a sequential dip of 10,700 tonnes, or 1.1 percent, to 995,100 tonnes.

VLSFO 100 cSt recovered from its 22 percent decrease in October to record sales of 597,900 tonnes - the highest figure since August, whilst VLSFO 180 cSt jumped 175,400 tonnes to 185,900 tonnes to achieve the best result since January.

In terms of accumulated volume for the year so far, Singapore sold 45.544m tonnes of marine fuel during the first 11 months of 2020 - a YoY improvement of 2.546m tonnes, or 5.9 percent.

Meanwhile, rolling 3-month volume of 12.633m tonnes between September and November was the highest since the 12.717m tonnes recorded between January and March.

November sales up despite drop in bunker calls

The number of ships greater than 75 gross tonnes (gt) calling at Singapore for bunkers in November was 3,359 - representing a YoY decrease of 178 ships, or 5.0 percent, and a MoM decline of 37 vessels, or 1.1 percent.

The total number of vessels greater than 75 gt arriving in Singapore plummeted YoY by 4,396, or 37.4 percent, to 7,347. Sequentially, November's figure was down 155, or 2.1 percent.


South Africa flag illustration. Peninsula expands marine fuel operations to Algoa Bay  

Supplier partners with Linsen Nambi to launch bunkering services from October.

Palace of Westminster, London. UK government commits GBP 448m to maritime decarbonisation research programme  

UK SHORE funding aims to accelerate clean shipping technologies through 2030.

Header image for ABS 2025 Sustainability Outlook, Beyond the Horizon: Vision Meets Reality. ABS chief urges IMO to pause net zero framework over fuel availability concerns  

Christopher Wiernicki says LNG and biofuels are 'mission critical' to shipping decarbonisation success.

Quadrise production process — illustration. Quadrise appoints veteran Peter Borup as CEO to drive commercialisation  

Former Maersk executive to lead decarbonisation technology company from October 1.

HMS Bergbau logo. German commodities trader HMS Bergbau enters marine fuels market  

Company acquires experienced team to trade bunkers and lubricants globally.

Product tanker Artizen, owned by Hong Lam Marine. Hong Lam Marine takes delivery of Artizen tanker in Japan  

Singapore-based firm receives new vessel from Kegoya Shipyard.

Birdseye view of containership. Panama Canal launches NetZero Slot to incentivize low-emission transits  

New reservation category prioritizes dual-fuel vessels capable of using alternative fuels from November.

Van Oord's Vox Apolonia. Van Oord deploys bio-LNG dredger for Dutch coastal project  

First bio-LNG-powered trailing suction hopper dredger operation begins in the Netherlands.

Model testing for Green Handy methanol-powered vessel. Methanol-fuelled Green Handy ships pass model tests ahead of 2026 construction  

Baltic carrier reports model testing exceeded performance targets for 17,000 dwt methanol-powered vessels.

Miguel Hernandez and Olivier Icyk at AiP for FPSO. SBM Offshore's floating ammonia production design gets ABS approval  

Design converts offshore gas to ammonia while capturing CO2 for maritime and power sectors.





 Recommended