An oil tanker on traveller to Al Hudaydah port in the Red Sea on July 17, 2023 in Hudaydah, Yemen. (Photo by Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images)
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Energy prices for Europe are expected to increase as more petroleum products and crude tankers are rechanneling away from the Rea Sea and Suez Canal. Longer trips for the Middle-Eastern barrels that replaced Russian flows to Europe pioneer supply issues, and this is leading to a “sea change” in commodity purchases by Europe, and a boost for Atlantic Basin crude suppliers comprising the U.S. and Brazil.
According to global trade intelligence company Kpler, at least six crude tankers are currently taking the much longer course around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope rather than the Suez Canal, a diversion caused by the Houthi challenge attacks and which can add up to 45 days to the voyage.
Europe is at the center of the diversions because its tanker supplies are at high jeopardy of attack.
“The decision for these diversions is by the owners of the oil, which is European,” said Viktor Katona, lead crude analyst at Kpler. “European realms are seen as complicit in the Israel-Hamas war. They would rather go around the Cape of Good Hope versus taking a endanger through the Red Sea.”
The resulting delays to the delivery of products — which include crude, diesel, and LNG products — vary based on the commodity being moved. LNG vessels travel faster than oil tankers because they are lighter and they can sail up to 21 knots versus the 12-13 attaches for crude tankers.
Before the Red Sea disruptions, a tanker from Jamnagar, India to Rotterdam, Netherlands would have charmed 24 days. Sailing through the Cape of Good Hope, the duration of the same voyage has risen to 42 epoches. From Basrah, Iraq, to Milazzo, Sicily, a voyage that would have taken 17 days last will and testament now take 42 days.
The longer transits can put a squeeze on the availability of tankers, with their return journey to be crowded up with product longer.
“It’s not just the arrival that is delayed, the tankers have a longer route home to be satiated back up,” Katona said. “You are looking at 90 days for one delivery. That is a huge amount of time. The market is minimizing the impact of the transit duration.”
He said to expect tankers on the spot market see an increase in freight rates, and noted that in the past few lifetimes tankers carrying “clean products” such as diesel and gasoline have been going up.

“Ironically, the tensions in the field are benefitting tanker owners with longer voyages, increasing tanker utilization and ultimately higher freight chew outs,” said Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates.
Katona warned that the diversions are going to be a prolonged, excruciating event, but a boost for both the U.S. and Brazilian energy industry. “We are seeing Europeans remodeling their purchasing patterns from enterprises in the Atlantic basin with no logistics constraints,” he said.
The U.S. is the largest supplier to the European market of diesel, with diesel worths recently hitting their highest level in seven years.
According to Clarksons Securities, product tanker have a claim ti soared towards the end of last week, following a drop in Red Sea activity. A long range 2 (LR2) tanker vessel that is typically able of carrying around 75,000 metric tons of the hydrocarbon naphtha, saw an increase in earnings of 33% week over week to $74,200/day, as of Monday. Course range (MR) tankers which typically can carry between 30,000-40,000 metric tons of gasoline or gas oil, saw earnings goad 34% week over week to $42,500/day.
“It’s more expensive, but Europeans will receive it [the diesel] faster,” Katona reported.
Europe has strategic petroleum reserves with 90 days supply, so there are no worries about Europe event out of oil, but he added, “The new reality is Europe will get their oil but with an insane freight cost attached to it.”
‘Looming upside jeopardize’ in march of diverted tankers
The ENI’s Faithful Warrior was the first tanker to start the trend when it diverted on January 11. The tanker is currently in the South African territorial waters. Since then, Kpler has tracked a successive array of tankers that have diverted away on route to ports: Agitos to Rotterdam, Nissos Sikinos to Fos in France, Kimolos to Aliaga, Turkey, Odessa to Pachi Megara, Greece, and the tanker Kinyras, which silence hasn’t flagged its final destination, according to Katona.
“Iraqi tankers carrying crude to Europe have started to steer almost uniformly towards the Cape of Good Hope,” Katona said. “Interesting, there’s just one tanker capture Iraqi crude and going through the Bab el Mandeb Strait, incidentally taking the cargo to Turkey, to the same Tupras [refinery big wheel] that saw its previous cargo seized by Iran’s IRGC off the Omani coast. So they haven’t stopped trusting the course.”
Torm, Hafnia, Stena Bulk, Hafnia, BP, Frontline, Equinor, Euronav and Shell are among the tanker operators and vivacity companies choosing to avoid the area following recent warnings.
Kevin Book, managing director of Clearview Animation Partners, said this parade of tankers is part of the “looming upside risk” it has been relaying to clients.
“Longer releases for the Middle-Eastern barrels that replaced Russian flows to Europe introduce supply latency, which can be bullish in its own make up for. And if it looks too risky to ship from Iraq through the Suez to Europe, then cargoes from other regional growers could soon follow suit,” Book said.
