Fri 25 May 2018 13:55

Maersk Line introduces Emergency Bunker Surcharge


Shipper unable to recover bunker costs through standard bunker adjustment factors due to price jump.


Image: Flickr
Maersk Line has confirmed that it will be introducing an Emergency Bunker Surcharge (EBS) next month following the recent jump in the price of marine fuel.

In a statement, Maersk Line said: "The increase in bunker price in 2018 has been significantly higher than what had been expected and has now reached a level of 440 USD/ton in Europe, the highest since 2014.

"The increase is more than 20% compared to the beginning of the year and this unexpected development means it is no longer possible for us to recover bunker costs through the standard bunker adjustment factors."

Maersk Line's EBS tariff is based on an IFO 380 price of $440 in Rotterdam. According to Bunker Index price data for May 25, IFO 380 in Rotterdam was being sold at $430-434 per tonne - down from the previous day's $438-$440.

The boxship operator's EBS tariff is subject to change based on the following trigger events:

- Should IFO 380 in Rotterdam increase to $530, EBS tariffs will be multiplied by a factor of 2.0.

- Should IFO 380 in Rotterdam decrease to $370, EBS tariffs will be zero.

The EBS will be applicable to all cargo on all trades - except for export shipments from mainland China. The EBS will apply in Hong Kong and Taiwan.

The surcharge is due to become effective from June 1, 2018, for non-regulated corridors and July 1, 2018, for regulated corridors.

As Bunker Index previously reported, Maersk's Ocean segment consumed 3.1 million tonnes of marine fuel in the first quarter of 2018 (representing a year-on-year rise of 28.0 percent), spending just under $1.2 billion.

The average price spent on bunkers by Ocean in Q1 was $382 per tonne - a rise of $62, or 19.3 percent, on the previous year, and a quarter-on-quarter increase of $42, or 12.4 percent.

Maersk Ocean includes the ocean activities of Maersk's Liner Business (Maersk Line, MCC, Seago Line and Sealand) together with Hamburg Sud brands Hamburg Sud and Alianca as well as strategic transshipment hubs under the APM Terminals brand.


Nordic Energy Partners logo. Nordic Energy Partners expands to Singapore with new operations hire  

Marine fuel trader appoints Bernard Cheah as operations executive in Asia-Pacific expansion move.

Global Ethanol Association (GEA) headquarters. Global Ethanol Association launches with marine fuel focus  

New Switzerland-based non-profit aims to accelerate ethanol adoption in shipping decarbonisation.

IceChem Tankers methanol-ready chemical tankers. IceChem Tankers orders four methanol-ready chemical tankers for North Atlantic trades  

Partners TB Marine and Ektank to deliver 22,000 dwt vessels between fall 2026 and summer 2027.

Jeffrey Siow and Sarbananda Sonowal, MoU signing. Singapore and India formalise green shipping corridor collaboration  

MoU signed to develop zero-emission marine fuels infrastructure and digital technologies.

Ard-Jan Kooren, Ali Gürün and KOTUG vessel. Sanmar advances construction of world's largest methanol-powered escort tug  

Vessel destined for Canadian operations, setting new benchmark for sustainable towage operations.

Typewriter job application. Koch Minerals & Trading offers bunker procurement internship in Singapore  

Koch subsidiary seeks intern for hands-on experience in marine fuel trading and operations.

VPS: Global pandemic of high cat fines. Global spike in cat fines contamination hits marine fuel supplies across major ports  

VPS testing reveals elevated aluminium and silicon levels in VLSFO across six major bunkering hubs.

Sleipner RoRo dual-fuel concept. New dual-fuel RoRo concept with bow-mounted engine room unveiled  

Vessel features dual-fuel electric propulsion capable of running on LNG, liquefied biogas, marine gas oil, and biodiesel.

LNG bunkering of Lake Travis by Gas Agility. Le Havre conducts first STS LNG bunkering operation at RoRo terminal  

French facility completes ship-to-ship operation weeks after receiving LNG Ready Terminal certification.

Well-to-tank emissions assessment 2025 Rystad Energy study finds LNG marine fuel emissions 25% lower than EU default  

New analysis shows global well-to-tank emissions at 13.9g CO2e/MJ, challenging FuelEU Maritime assumptions.