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The rate of uranium freight to India has increased in January due to bad weather and higher risks

Industry sources said that the freight rates for tankers shipping Urals crude to India from Russia's western port have risen in this month. This is because bad weather has made fewer vessels and disrupted loading and unloading, and increased costs of insurance. Two oil tankers were struck by drones in the Black Sea Tuesday, including a tanker chartered by the U.S. oil giant Chevron. After drone attacks this week on two Greek-operated oil tankers, Greece has instructed its shipping fleet to take the most stringent security measures when sailing into Russian Black Sea ports.

The average freight?costs for transporting Urals to India from the Baltic port of Primorsk or Ust-Luga for loading in February are $9 million, compared to $8?million for one-way trips last November and December. Suezmax tankers that can carry 140,000 tons of cargo have increased their rates for similar shipments to India from the Black Sea port in Novorossiisk, Russia. The previous two months, they were charging around $7 million.

At the end of last year, traders predicted that Russian crude exports in January would drop due to increased domestic refinery runs and possible weather-related disruption. Reduced vessel demand should limit any increase in freight rates. According to trading sources, and calculations, the number of barrels shipped per day by the ports of Primorsk Ust-Luga Novorossiisk via Urals, Siberian Light, and KEBCO crude grades is expected to drop from 2.4 million to 2.2 million, compared to the December plan. Sources say that as Greek shipowners decrease their presence in the area, Urals shipments to Russian ports are increasingly handled via tankers from the Shadow Fleet. Barbara Lewis (Reporting; Editing)

(source: Reuters)