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Sources say that the rates of uranium freight to India have risen to their highest levels in 12 months.

The rates of shipping Russian Urals oil to India from ports on the Baltic Sea and Black Sea rose to their highest level since March 2024, following U.S. sanctioned against tankers that were involved in Moscow’s energy exports. Trading and shipping sources and calculations also showed this.

Sources said that the demand for tankers has been pushed higher by the expected rise in oil exports, partly because of the increase in CPC blends.

After the U.S. sanctioned 183 tankers, Urals crude freight rates began to increase in January. The higher freight costs result in lower revenue for Russian oil sellers as they must pay more to transport their products.

Sources said that costs for one-way trips from Russian Baltic Ports Primorsk, Ust-Luga and Novorossiisk on the Black Sea, to Indian ports have risen to $8 million, compared to an average of $7.5 million in February.

This is much lower than the previous record of almost $20 million per trip in 2022, after the West imposed its first sanctions against Russia's oil industry. These included a price cap as well as an oil embargo by the European Union.

Shipping data revealed that in early January, prior to the latest U.S. sanction, the cost for a tanker to travel from Russia's Baltic port to India, an Aframax, costed about $4.7 to $4.9 million. The cost for a tanker to travel from Novorossiisk, based on the Black Sea, to India, a Suezmax, capable of carrying 140,000 tons of cargo, costed around $4.3 to $4.5 million.

The increasing demand for tankers and the arbitrage of Kazakh CPC blend oil in Asia has also led to an increase in the prices of freight markets in the Mediterranean.

A trader in the CPC blend oil market stated that "rising CPC Blend exports into Asia (from the Black Sea Terminal near Novorossiisk), provide additional support for freight rates as longer voyages require vessels to take longer to return to Europe".

According to the Energy Ministry, Kazakhstan will increase its oil exports through the CPC pipeline in March by 12% compared to February.

(source: Reuters)