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Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Oil tankers can’t unload at Port Dickson, say sources

An oil tanker docks at a refinery off the coast of Port Dickson. (Bernama pic)
SINGAPORE: Two tankers carrying oil are unable to offload their cargoes at Port Dickson after a facility that carries crude from the ships to refineries broke down, four sources familiar with the matter said today.
A system known as a single point mooring (SPM) unit, a loading buoy anchored offshore that allows tankers to offload their crude via pipeline to the refineries, has been out of service, said the sources.
The SPM connects to a refinery operated by Hengyuan Refining Company Bhd (HRC), a subsidiary of China’s Shandong Hengyuan Petrochemical Co, and a second plant owned by the Philippines’ largest refiner Petron Corp.
None of the sources were certain what caused the SPM outage.
Hengyuan’s refinery has a capacity of 156,000 barrels per day (bpd), while Petron’s refinery has a crude distillation capacity of 88,000 bpd, according to their websites.
Petron Malaysia Refining & Marketing Bhd (PMRMB) confirmed that its Port Dickson refinery cannot receive crude oil to produce refined products due to an SPM problem, and said it had taken necessary measures to import more refined products to meet its needs.
The SPM is anticipated to return to normal operations by early November and the company’s temporary inability to process crude oil at the refinery will not impact its supply of finished products to the market, PMRMB said.
Hengyuan did not respond to requests seeking comment.
The outage appears to have delayed two ships that were scheduled to unload at the port, shipping data on Refinitiv Eikon showed.
Royal Dutch Shell has chartered the Maran Plato, a Suezmax-sized tanker, to discharge on Oct 18 and the Torm Valborg, an Aframax-sized vessel, on Oct 16, the data showed.
But the tankers were still anchored off the port laden with crude as of Tuesday, the data showed.
Shell declined to comment.
When contacted by Reuters, the Port Dickson Marine Department said the companies that have operations in Port Dickson run their own mooring operations and the department was not aware of any delay in shipments as they did not receive any complaints. - FMT

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