The rates for Very Large Crude
Carrier (VLCC) were up 3.5 per cent month-on-month to $48,171/day in February,
according to data collated from the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy
(CMIE). It was $46,555 in January and $47,975 in December.
Rates have been volatile amid heightened geopolitical tensions. Aframax and
Suezmax rates have seen a decline in the same period.
Shipping vessels are classified by their capacity. Aframax vessels have
a maximum capacity of around 120,000 deadweight tonnes. Deadweight tonne is a
measure of the amount that ships can carry. It encompasses all the weight on
the ship including cargo, people and supplies.
Suezmax tankers have a capacity of between 180,000 deadweight tonnes.
This is the maximum size vessel which can go through the Suez Canal. The Suez
Canal is the shortest sea route connecting Europe and Asia. The increase in oil
trade resulted in the use of two bigger categories of vessels. The Very Large
Crude Carrier (VLCC) has a capacity of up to 320,000 deadweight tonnes. It is
around 550,000 tonnes for the Ultra-Large Crude Carrier (ULCC). The VLCC has
been the most widely-used category of vessel for carrying crude across the
world.
The Baltic Dry Index measures the cost of carrying dry bulk commodities
such as coal and iron ore around the world. It gained 5.7 per cent in February.
There have been tensions in the Red Sea region which have caused a
number of vessels to take a longer route around Africa and have affected
shipping rates. The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)
warned of the long-term effects of the disruption on Thursday 22 Feb. “Recent attacks on commercial vessels in
the Red Sea have severely affected shipping through the Suez Canal, adding to
existing geopolitical and climate-related challenges facing global trade and
supply chains,” said the February 22nd UNCTAD note.
“UNCTAD underscores the far-reaching economic implications of prolonged
disruptions in container shipping, threatening global supply chains and
potentially delaying deliveries, causing higher costs and inflation. The full
impact of higher freight rates will be felt by consumers within a year,” it
added. Separately, Moody’s Investor Services on Thursday said that the impact
on inflation of the ongoing disruptions may be limited by low demand and high
ship availability.
As of
February 20, 2024, the seven-day moving average of the transit trade volume in
the Suez Canal was 1,878,826, showing a declining trend in the trade, as per
Port Watch, a
collaborative project between the International Monetary Fund and the
University of Oxford.