Abandon ship: oil tanker scrappage to hit multi-year high as earnings sink

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By Jessica Jaganathan

The surge in scrapping underscores how the sector is grappling with one of its worst-ever crises, hit hard after rates for transporting plunged to multi-year lows in the wake of excess tanker supply and tepid demand as production cuts bite.

"The tanker markets are definitely in a trough at the moment, with one of the worst years in a decade in terms of freight rates and returns," said Ralph Leszczynski, at in

The tough operating conditions are expected to persist until at least the second-half of 2019, analysts and industry sources said.

Estimates on the number of tanker demolitions vary between the four shipping analysts that spoke to, with the most conservative standing at a seven-year high in 2018.

About 10.3 million deadweight tonnes (DWT) have been sold for demolition from January to April this year, compared with 11.2 million DWT for the whole of 2017 and 2.5 million for 2016, said Erik Broekhuizen, at

"production cuts are hurting the market, and as long as they are in place, the tanker market will remain challenged," he said, adding that scrapping had picked up for large vessels in particular.

Since early 2017, members of the Organization of the Exporting Countries (OPEC), and other non-crude producers have curbed exports to fight a global glut.

The imposition of new U.S. sanctions against looks set to further reduce later in 2018, although and have discussed potentially raising output to fill the subsequent void.

GETTING SCRAPPY

More stringent environmental regulations to be implemented by the (IMO) in 2020 will make operating old ships uneconomical, said Leszczynski at

Limited interest in using to store oil, which has historically been a profitable option for shipowners during lulls in shipping volumes, is also curbing overall demand, analysts said.

prices in Shanghai, - the world's top consumer and of the material - have meanwhile nearly doubled from a year ago due to shutdowns of amid a widespread crackdown on industrial emissions.

Firms that have recently sent ships for scrapping include India's and Oslo-listed The latter last month reported better earnings than analysts had expected, partly due to its increased scrapping.

GETTING YOUNGER

The ships being scrapped are also getting younger, with the average age falling to 19.5 years in the first quarter of this year, compared with 2017's average of 22 years, said Rajesh Verma, an with shipping consultancy Drewry.

Most of the vessels are being scrapped in and India, although has also returned to the demolition market after an 18-month ban, analysts said.

The uptick in demolition rates has come despite increased opposition from European regulators due to environmental concerns.

Despite the high scrap rate, tanker earnings will continue to be hit as fleet-growth is still too high, analysts said.

Banchero Costa's Leszczynski expects the crude tanker fleet to expand 3.3 percent this year, following growth of 4.6 percent last year and 5.8 percent in 2016.

With tanker rates still a long way from being profitable, there's little prospect of a broad industry improvement until the second half of 2019 at the earliest, said Peter Sand, chief shipping at group

"Any recovery in rates in the tanker market will be hinged on the extent of scrapping in the coming years ... we expect rates to start recovering in the second half of 2019 if scrapping remains strong," said Verma at Drewry.

(Reporting by Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by and Joseph Radford)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, June 03 2018. 08:27 IST