<article><p class="lead">Port delays often exceeding a month off China's coast, where over 50 very large crude carriers (VLCCs) sit with crude oil, continue to slow floating storage destocking. </p><p>Of the more than 50 VLCCs laden with crude oil sitting off China's northern coast, 31 are in floating storage — defined as idling for a week or longer — and have been waiting for an average of 21 days, according to <i>Argus</i> analysis of Vortexa data. </p><p>For context, that is more than half of the 60 VLCCs that are currently in floating storage worldwide at a time when floating storage volumes are more than <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2120046">triple</a> the norm. </p><p>One of the VLCCs that is experiencing a longer-than-average delay is the <i>Kirkuk</i>, which has been idling near the Chinese port of Qingdao for 37 days, after arriving with a Nigerian crude cargo loaded back in late April.</p><p>A <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2118689">flood</a> of low-cost crude imports into China since June has overburdened the Shandong region's <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2109937">pipeline</a> and storage capacity, preventing arriving tankers from offloading on time. </p><h3>Long voyage ahead for floating storage wind down</h3><p>A tentative rebalancing of the oil market following the April-May price war has drawn some crude out of floating storage, but the process has been slow. China is not the only region where tanker-stored crude oil is lingering. Another region attracting crude floating storage is Canada's east coast, where the <i>Eliza</i> VLCC arrived from the US Gulf coast on 1 July for what has become the tanker's second floating storage stint. The tanker, which Shell has under time charter for $120,000/d according to the <i>Argus</i> floating storage bookings database, previously was sitting near Louisiana Offshore Oil Port (LOOP) after loading there on 7 April. </p><p>Shipowners in June said they expect a floating storage <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2114990">drawdown in the second half of this year</a>, with the extent and specific timing dependent on a recovery in global oil demand. </p><p>A muted rebound of the global economy because of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic could mean that higher-than-usual floating storage persists into 2021. Research and advisory firm McQuilling Services forecasts the number of VLCCs in floating storage will fall to 51 by December, down from a June peak of 76 VLCCs, but still above the 30 that it says were in floating storage in February. </p><p class="bylines">By Nicholas Watt</p></article>