Tankers Expected to Benefit From Increased South American Oil Supply
According to Gibson, “demand growth has been rocky. Prior to the pandemic, the economy struggled. Brazil’s GDP contracted during 2014-16, whilst Argentina has spent 6 out of the last 10 years in recession and also experienced hyperinflation. Venezuela has continued to decline under the weight of sanctions and authoritarian rule. By contrast, Guyana is in the midst of an oil-funded transformation but is too small to make any meaningful contribution to demand growth”.
“All of this combined means that despite the size of the continent, demand growth is likely to remain slow and steady in the years ahead. Aside from the pandemic, growth has typically been around 100kbd/year and is forecast to increase by just 400kbd by 2030 vs. 2024 levels. Little progress is being made in expanding refining capacity, which despite the limited growth in oil consumption, is modestly positive for the product tanker market. However, domestically produced biofuels and blending mandates will limit the gains in hydrocarbon imports. It also remains to be seen whether Russia will continue to grow its market share in the region to the expense of US refiners, who from next year may need to divert barrels away from Mexico as the Olmeca refinery ramps up”, the shipbroker said.
Gibson concluded that “crude tankers are set to be the primary beneficiaries. Oil supply is forecast to grow by 1.3mbd by the end of the decade, with almost all of this growth heading for export given that refining throughput will grow by just 100kbd over the same period. Argentina plans to be begin VLCC exports by 2026, whilst Brazil and Guyana grow to the end of the decade, subject to additional upstream investment. Further upside potential could be seen if Venezuela is able to emerge from sanctions and reintegrate into the mainstream oil markets. Overall, the region remains a driver of tanker demand largely due to its export potential, with crude tankers likely to benefit to a greater extent than clean tankers”.
Nikos Roussanoglou, Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide