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After the fire in Fujairah, UAE, bunkering has slowed down. However, demand for other hubs is expected to increase.

Market sources report that ship refuelling in Fujairah has slowed down after a fire broke out at the port on Tuesday. However, demand for fuel at other hubs, including Singapore, is expected to increase.

Traders, suppliers and shippers are waiting for more clarity about the situation. Others say that bunkering can still be done.

In a statement released on Tuesday, oil storage companies VTTI and Vopak stated that they 'have temporarily suspended their operations at the Fujairah Terminal following a fire.

Fuel shipments were disrupted by the U.S./Iran conflict, causing a?surge in Fujairah prices on Monday and possibly shifting demand towards other ports, including Singapore.

After a few vessels were struck, the transit through the Strait of Hormuz between Iran and Oman - which transports around a fifth of the oil used globally, as well as a large quantity of liquefied gas - has come to halt.

Market sources in Dubai said that while bunkering is continuing at the port, sales have largely been halted after marine fuel prices jumped Monday on concerns about a prolonged disruption of supply.

Fujairah is located on the east coast of United Arab Emirates, near the Strait of Hormuz.

Sources said that low-sulphur marine oil prices at the port increased to more than $30 per ton compared to Singapore fuel oil quotations last week from $10 to $15, whereas high-sulphur gasoline moved from discounts to premiums.

DEMAND TO FIRM in other HUBS

As consumption in?Fujairah slows, traders anticipate that demand will shift to other hubs, such as Rotterdam, Colombo, the Mediterranean or India, if tankers choose to avoid the Middle East.

Suppliers and traders reported that spot demand for fuel at the world's biggest bunkering facility, Singapore, was already high late Monday night as shipowners rushed to secure fuel before prices rose further.

One of them stated that "demand will increase in the coming weeks if war continues, and premiums will follow because the supply will be disrupted."

Sources declined to name themselves as they weren't authorised to talk to the media.

Brent crude futures spiked sharply, causing a dramatic rise in the prices and margins of high-sulphur fuel oils in Asia on Monday.

The current shipper caution means that there is a 'gridlock' on Strait of Hormuz volumes?transferred for the time being, and prolonged disruptions will reduce?bunker fuel supplies in Singapore," Royston Huan said, a senior oil product analyst at Energy Aspects.

(source: Reuters)