Russian shipping company Sovcomflot has started this year's
transportation of Urals crude oil to Asia via the Northern Sea Route,
according to market sources and LSEG data on Tuesday, as melting ice
opens the Arctic route for transit shipments.
Russia wants
alternative routes to Asia from its western ports as Western sanctions
have made it increasingly difficult for its fleet to operate in waters
close to European Union countries.
But the Northern Sea Route
(NSR), though significantly shorter than the Suez Canal alternative, is
challenging and requires the assistance of icebreakers to help vessels
to pass along the northern coast of Russia.
It is normally opened for oil shipments from July to October.
The
NSR runs for about 5,600 km (3,500 miles) and connects the port of
Murmansk near Russia's border with Norway eastwards to the Bering Strait
near Alaska. The ice has shrunk in recent decades in a trend scientists
have linked to man-made climate change.
President Vladimir Putin
has pushed the development of the route as part of Russia's pivot to
Asia amid the biggest crisis in relations with the West since the depths
of the Cold War.
Aframax vessel Viktor Bakaev, operated by
Sovcomflot and sanctioned by the U.S., loaded some 100,000 metric tons
of Urals crude in Primorsk on July 21 and is currently in the Barents
Sea on the way to Asia, LSEG data shows.
Another two of
Sovcomflot's Aframax crude vessels, Korolev Prospect - which is also
under U.S. sanctions - and Vernadsky Prospect, are currently heading
west via the NSR from Russia's Far East, the data shows.
Two industry sources said these tankers are likely to load oil from Russia's western ports for supplies to Asia.
It
was not clear which Asian ports the oil would be delivered to or if it
would be offloaded to other vessels in Russia's Far East. The cargoes
will likely be delivered to China, the market sources told Reuters.
In
June the European Union imposed sanctions on Russian shipping group
Sovcomflot following the designation of 14 of its tankers by Washington
earlier this year.
Sovcomflot did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment.
Demand
for shipments via the Arctic route among Russian oil companies is set
to stay high in 2024 as at least seven of Sovcomflot's 100,000-tonne
vessels have already received permission for transit navigation along
the NSR this year, according to Rosatom's open register of applications.
Last
year Russia sent some 0.6 million tons of Urals crude to Asia via NSR.
This year oil volumes transported via the route are expected to rise
significantly, the sources said.
Rosatom, the Russian state
nuclear agency also in charge of navigation via the route, provides
ice-breakers that assist tankers in their voyages via NSR.
Russia
in 2022 approved a development plan that saw cargo volumes rising from
34 million metric tons in 2022 to 150 million in 2030. Last year the
turnover exceeded 36 million tons.
Source: Marine Link
https://www.marinelink.com/news/russia-opens-arctic-route-shipping-urals-515558