Tankers -Vessels Information-

 

 

1)  Clean and Dirty Tankers

 

 

Vessel sizes:

 

Deadweight tons (DWT)

GP

General Purpose

16,500 — 24,999

MR

Medium Range

25,000 — 44,999

LR1

Large/Long Range1

45,000 — 79,999

LR2

Large/Long Range 2

80,000 — 159,999

Aframax

 

75,000 — 110,000

Suezmax

 

110,000 — 150,000

VLCC

Very Large Crude Carrier

160,000 — 319,999

ULCC

Ultra Large Crude Carrier

320,000 — 549,000

Capsize: Any vessel, usually carrying dry bulk cargoes, that is too big to navigate the Panama or Suez Canals.

 

 

Rate Assessments: Rates assessments are made daily. Rates are based either on the World scale system or a US dollar lump sum quote. Lump sums, the cost of fixing a tanker expressed in dollar terms, are used more often in assessing clean tanker rates. Fixtures can be made using either method, but there isn't necessarily a precedent to follow.

 

Cargo sizes that don't exactly match those listed within the rates table may be pro-rated and the equivalent rates used as a guide to any relevant rates change.

 

2)  Abbreviations

 

 

Dirty products:

Clean products:

CO

Condensate

CO

Condensate

CR

Crude Oil

DS

Diesel

FO

Fuel oil

GO

Gas Oil

DY

Dirty petroleum products

JT

Jet

 

 

KR

Kerosene

 

 

LD

Leaded

 

 

LD

Naphtha

 

 

UN

Unleaded

 

 

CL

Clean petroleum products.

 

 3)  Dirty Tankers: Chartering Margins Table

 

The Chartering Margins Table indicates a "profit margin" based on the difference between the latest spot price for four selected blends of crude oil, and their cracking yields at refineries in Houston and Rotterdam. The $/bbl column shows this refining margin for each crude. (The source of the prices and the cracking yields is Platt’s Crude Oil Market wire from the day before each Dirty Tanker table is published.) The column headed "WS" offers the equivalent for the $/bbl figure in terms of the relevant WS flat rate: i.e., a "maximum" World scale rate the chatterer can pay and still break even when a given crude is shipped to a Houston/Rotterdam refinery. This is reached by converting the $/bbl figure into a $/mt and expressing it as a percentage of a composite World scale flat rate for representative voyages. The columns headed -1 and -7 days show the changes in the $/bbl margin from the day before, and the previous week.

 

4)  Clean Tankers: Regional Price Differences

 

The Regional Price Differences table computes arbitrage values using Platt’s product price assessments, and converting them into the equivalent World scale value. The table shows the differences in product prices between various regions and converts the same figure into World scale to show the maximum shipping rate at which products can be profitably transported from one market to another.