Mon 17 Nov 2014, 17:38 GMT

Singapore: month-on-month sales up, year-on-year volumes down


Bunker sales in October were 2 percent higher than the previous month but 4.9 percent lower than in October 2013.



Month-on-month bunker sales in Singapore rose for only the four month this year in October, according to data released by the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA).

Total sales at the world's leading bunker port increased last month by 72,100 tonnes, or 2.0 percent, to 3,593,600 tonnes, up from 3,521,500 tonnes in September. It is the second volume increase in three months.

In comparison with the corresponding month last year, October volumes were down by 187,000 tonnes, or 4.9 percent. It is the fourth time in five months that year-on-year volumes have fallen. So far in 2014, monthly bunker sales have been lower on six occasions compared to 2013.

Accumulated bunker sales for the year so far are 35,290,900 tonnes, which represents a decrease of 215,800 tonnes compared to the first ten months of 2013 (35,506,700 tonnes). The figure is also below the volumes sold during the corresponding period in 2012 (35,784,000 tonnes) and 2011 (35,734,300 tonnes), but above the 34,069,400 tonnes sold between January and October 2010.

It is the eighth time in ten months that accumulated sales volumes have been below 2013 levels.

Month-on-month sales of 380 centistoke (cSt) - Singapore's largest-selling bunker grade - rose by 48,000 tonnes, or 1.8 percent, in October to 2,696,800 tonnes. In comparison with the corresponding month last year, 380 cSt sales were down by 169,800 tonnes, or 5.9 percent.

500 cSt volumes rose to their fifth-highest level of the year so far, to 694,600 tonnes, up from 677,600 tonnes in September. October's result is 5,800 tonnes, or 0.8 percent, higher than in October 2013. Year-on-year sales of 500 cSt have only declined twice so far this year - in September and March.

Below are tables of bunker sales in Singapore for each fuel grade in 2014, 2013, 2012 and 2011 with accumulated totals in the bottom row.

2014 Total 500cst 380cst 180cst MGO
Jan 3,557.8 635.7 2,754.8 42.9 70.4
Feb 3,277.4 524.1 2,522.0 73.8 91.7
Mar 3,184.9 574.1 2,402.7 57.8 88.3
Apr 3,812.9 747.9 2,814.2 79.9 98.7
May 3,637.6 718.2 2,701.9 64.4 90.0
Jun 3,373.8 668.7 2,479.8 78.7 80.3
Jul 3,662.6 737.8 2,718.2 57.7 86.3
Aug 3,668.8 728.1 2,736.7 58.0 82.8
Sep 3,521.5 677.6 2,648.8 57.6 89.9
Oct 3,593.6 694.6 2,696.8 55.1 94.1
Total 35,290.9 6,706.8 26,475.9 625.9 872.5


2013 Total 500cst 380cst 180cst MGO
Jan 3,787.6 581.8 2,929.3 99.7 119.3
Feb 3,076.4 492.0 2,365.7 69.9 84.5
Mar 3,362.7 580.8 2,512.7 78.8 104.8
Apr 3,647.9 633.2 2,713.7 94.2 113.9
May 3,529.0 644.3 2,633.2 89.5 93.7
Jun 3,478.2 641.6 2,588.7 81.1 95.0
Jul 3,740.8 714.6 2,773.0 81.7 107.3
Aug 3,488.1 693.0 2,570.9 69.7 96.7
Sep 3,610.5 684.9 2,673.5 77.5 104.1
Oct 3,780.6 688.8 2,866.6 71.4 91.6
Nov 3,373.1 652.2 2,525.0 67.4 74.5
Dec 3,802.4 654.2 2,917.8 69.4 97.4
Total 42,682.2 7,661.4 32,070.1 950.3 1182.8


2012 Total 500cst 380cst 180cst MGO
Jan 3,668.5 406.3 3,019.0 115.3 113.3
Feb 3,092.7 407.2 2,436.9 112.3 128.7
Mar 3,608.8 486.9 2,885,4 106.1 126.4
Apr 3,735.4 515.3 2,982.6 103.5 129.9
May 3,985.7 591.5 3,144.6 117.50 128.4
Jun 3,646.9 553.6 2,883.3 85.6 123.4
Jul 3,665.2 503.5 2,924.4 110.0 114.7
Aug 3,556.0 568.1 2,756.7 107.9 120.1
Sep 3,326.4 535.9 2,570.1 87.7 118.1
Oct 3,508.4 549.1 2,747.0 92.7 114.2
Nov 3,275.6 566.7 2,491.9 92.3 118.6
Dec 3,625.7 541.4 2,843.6 116.1 118.3
Total 42,685.3 6,225.5 33,685.5 1,247.0 1,454.1


2011 Total 500cst 380cst 180cst MGO
Jan 3,642.4 480.3 2,841.2 171.0 134.0
Feb 3,268.8 438.7 2,544.2 151.8 111.7
Mar 3,520.7 472.9 2,747.8 146.5 134.9
Apr 3,248.5 425.4 2,541.5 132.2 118.9
May 3,621.9 475.7 2,873.7 130.6 123.2
Jun 3,859.2 515.2 3,031.9 141.1 143.4
Jul 3,642.9 476.6 2,883.7 135.2 127.8
Aug 3,815.3 470.2 3,050.4 133.6 149.3
Sep 3,568.4 468.1 2,836.8 132.0 125.6
Oct 3,546.2 385.3 2,867.1 131.9 145.1
Nov 3,615.4 537.6 2,800.7 124.2 126.8
Dec 3,804.1 431.8 3,103.1 110.9 128.9
Total 43,153.6 5,577.7 34,122.1 1,641.0 1,569.6


Global Ethanol Association (GEA) and Vale logo side by side. Vale joins Global Ethanol Association as founding member  

Brazilian mining company becomes founding member of association focused on ethanol use in maritime sector.

KPI OceanConnect Logo. KPI OceanConnect seeks marine fuel trading intern in Singapore  

Bunker supplier advertises role offering exposure to commercial and operational aspects of marine fuel business.

Frank Dahan, CSL Group. CSL Group's Frank Dahan appointed chair of IBIA's Americas regional board  

Dahan brings 29 years of marine transportation and energy experience to the role.

IMO Member States, Belgium delegation. Lloyd's Register, EXMAR, and Belgium’s Federal Public Service develop interim guidelines for ammonia cargo as fuel  

Guidelines expected to receive formal IMO approval in May 2026, enabling ammonia use on gas carriers.

Knut Ørbeck-Nilssen, DNV. DNV to lead Nordic roadmap Phase 2 for zero-carbon shipping transition  

Programme will identify green corridors and tackle cost barriers through new financing approaches.

Monjasa logo. Monjasa seeks trader for Dubai operations  

Marine fuel supplier recruiting for trading role covering sales, purchasing, and logistics in UAE.

IBIA Board Elections 2026 – Call for Nominations announcement. IBIA calls for board election nominations ahead of Friday deadline  

Association seeks candidates for 2026 board positions with submissions closing 12 December.

Fraua vessel. BMT Bunker adds tanker MT Fraua to fleet  

BMT Bunker und Mineralöltransport has expanded its fleet with a new vessel.

Ruby bunkering vessel. Island Oil expands Cyprus bunkering fleet with vessel Ruby  

Island Oil adds second bunkering vessel to strengthen marine fuel supply operations in Cyprus.

Wärtsilä and Aalto University partnership signing. Wärtsilä and Aalto University extend R&D partnership to accelerate marine decarbonisation  

Five-year agreement expands international collaboration on alternative fuels and clean energy technologies.