Disruption at the CPC terminal in the Black Sea, where loadings have been completely suspended after storm damage on 22 March, could weigh on Suezmax and Aframax rates in southern Europe and beyond.
The terminal is the largest single loading point for Aframaxes and Suezmaxes in the Black Sea/Mediterranean region, with about one Aframax a day and one Suezmax every 1.5 days loading there in the past 12 months, according to Vortexa data. This is around 25pc of all Black Sea/Mediterranean Aframax loadings and 33pc of all Suezmax loadings.
A prolonged disruption to loadings could therefore weigh significantly on demand and freight rates.
Black Sea dirty tanker rates are at a sharp premium to rates for Mediterranean loadings, as the unwillingness of some shipowners to load cargoes from Russia has narrowed the pool of vessels available to charterers in the region. But the premium has narrowed gradually since it spiked directly after the escalation of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, with more willing shipowners positioning vessels in the area, according to shipbrokers. And a significant drop in demand from the Black Sea could tip the supply/demand balance further towards length.
The latest Aframax bookings reported for CPC to Mediterranean voyages were at WS335, with the rate having peaked at WS480 — a record high since Argus assessments began — in the days after the conflict escalated. Suezmax rates on the same route have fallen from a post-conflict peak of WS300, to WS195 on 22 March.
Information from shipping agents shows 18 vessels scheduled to load at the CPC Terminal before the end of March, 11 Suezmaxes and seven Aframaxes, with another five ships currently listed for early April. Five of these are already waiting outside Novorossiysk, and most of the rest are in the Black Sea already or transiting the Turkish Straits.
If loadings are delayed or cancelled, resulting in fewer ships heading to the Black Sea in ballast, the impact would probably also be felt in the Mediterranean Aframax market from where vessels for the Black Sea often ballast. The Suezmax impact could be spread further, with vessels commonly ballasting from east of Suez to carry out Black Sea loadings.

