- Chinese buyers are shuttling
ships to tankers at sea to get cheapoil fromRussia , per Bloomberg. - Chinese buyers are using risky ship-to-ship transfers as more ship owners shun Russian oil, it said.
Following the sanctions imposed over Russia's invasion of
Shipbrokers told the outlet that at least one Chinese buyer is shuttling smaller vessels between the port of Kozmino in Russia and the coastline of Yeosu in South Korea. From there, the oil is transferred onto a massive oil tanker, which then makes its way to China, they said.
Bloomberg cited an example from ship-tracking data which showed two of China's Cosco Shipping Holdings smaller tankers, Yang Li Hu and Yang Mei Hu, stocking up with Russian oil ESPO in mid-May in Kozmino port and sailing to Yeosu to transfer the cargo onto the Yuan Qiu Hu tanker, which then traveled to China three-quarters full of crude.
It's unusual for Russian ESPO oil to be transported in this way. Normally, it's ferried directly to the buyer in China via small tankers, Bloomberg reported.
The availability of oil tankers has dropped because of the financial sanctions against Russia, per Bloomberg. The ship-to-ship transfers allow the oil producers and buyers to deploy their fleet of vessels in a more effective manner, the shipbrokers told Bloomberg. However, it's not being done to avoid sanctions, they reportedly added.
Shipbrokers told Bloomberg that the process takes longer for the oil to reach the buyer and costs more.
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