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South African bitumen imports surge on rising activity

  • : Oil products
  • 23/05/02

Imports of bitumen cargoes to South Africa have risen dramatically this year, because of a lack of domestic production and a buoyant road paving season.

Several international trading and supply firms are engaged in intense competition to win business into the growing import market, resulting in nearly 70,000t of bitumen being delivered to Durban and Cape Town in the first four months of this year. Just one 4,600t cargo was delivered in the same period of 2022.

Activity has accelerated in recent months, with imports reaching 20,800t in April. An impending May-June planned maintenance shutdown at South Africa's only bitumen producing refinery, the Sasol-TotalEnergies' joint venture 107,000 b/d Natref, has triggered a surge in inland requirements, some for onward truck export to neighbouring countries.

Uncertainty over the precise timetable for a halt to bitumen output and supply from Natref has contributed to a rush to buy and stock bitumen during the tail end of South Africa's peak paving season. Market participants now expect Natref bitumen production and supply to be halted from mid-May until the end of June, although this is unconfirmed.

Requirements for bitumen in South Africa have risen sharply this year, as roads authority Sanral has stepped up tender awards and funding. This came after an indifferent 2022 that saw the agency cancel 17bn rand ($920mn) of tenders last June before re-issuing and awarding most of them several months later.

Numerous trading and supply firms, including Vitol, Gunvor, Rubis Asphalt, Continental Bitumen, Element Alpha and BituBulk have all supplied cargoes to Cape Town and Durban this year, with Trafigura having been a regular supplier in 2021 and 2022. This year's shipments have been from a wide number of supply points including Turkey, Pakistan, Greece, Bahrain and the Netherlands. Trafigura has previously sent cargoes to South Africa from its terminal at Cadiz, Spain.

Delivered prices into South Africa have been underpinned by increasingly tight bitumen tanker availability and higher freight rates. The cost to move one 5,000t cargo in late March/early April from Agio Theodori, Greece, to Durban was estimated by ship brokers at $260-270/t, with costs from Bahrain and Singapore likely to be as high as around $180/t currently.

But cargo import and domestic truck prices have nevertheless slipped this year, mainly because of a general drop in crude and oil products values since the surge in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. In mid-August last year, South African domestic truck prices were assessed as high as R15,250/t ($925/t) ex-works. These have fallen to R14,100/t ($772/t) on 28 April.


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