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Weather disruptions cut Mexican coke exports

  • : Petroleum coke
  • 26/03/23

Fog and rainy weather disrupted loadings from Mexico's Dos Bocas port in January, tightening supply of high-sulphur fuel-grade coke.

Increasing export availability from Mexico following the ramp up of production at Mexican state-owned Pemex's 340,000 b/d Olmeca refinery at Dos Bocas in the second half of 2025 had helped keep supply balanced in the fourth quarter. But spot offers dried up so far this year after poor weather conditions prevented loadings from Dos Bocas for most of January and required these cargoes to be pushed to February, according to market participants. Many products need to load at the port and get priority over coke, and operational issues with a short conveyor belt to move coke onto vessels caused further problems, market participants said.

Preliminary data from ship tracker Kpler showed 110,000t of coke on four ships exported that month, although sources said at most two cargoes loaded from the port in January. Draft restrictions at the port limit ships to loading about 35,000t. In comparison, Mexico shipped 248,600t in December and 212,800t in November, according to the latest available official trade data compiled by Global Trader Tracker (GTT).

Kpler showed 184,400t loaded on four ships in February, much of which had been delayed from the previous month. And Mexico has loaded three cargoes of coke totalling about 101,400t so far in March, Kpler data show. At least four cargoes are expected to load this month, a market participant said.

But although the loading rate appears to be improving, there has still been little spot offered from the refinery. One buyer said in early March that although it was still confirming laycans, it had not received new offers for some time. And another said the refinery had an end March/early April loading cargo to offer but postponed the sale.

The slowdown in Mexican exports in January and February potentially disrupted supply to Florida utility JEA, which purchased over 500,000t of Mexico-origin coke for delivery this year in a November tender. The utility had scheduled five delivery windows for the shipments across January, June and August.

But even with lower shipments so far this year, market participants still expect Mexican coke exports to surpass last year's levels, as the country's domestic refining output is set to rise further in 2026. Mexico exported nearly 1.5mn t of coke in full-year 2025, according to GTT. Shipments will likely be closer to 2mn t or more in 2026 as Dos Bocas' coker output continues to become more consistent, a Mexican cement maker said.

Pemex is also planning to switch berths sometime this year to be able to load 50,000t cargoes. This could help assuage concerns from some buyers about doing long-term contracts for the supply.

"Unless loadings improve going forward from Dos Bocas, this will impact [sourcing] decisions in 2027", one coke buyer said.


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