Fujairah Bunker Market Deteriorates Sharply as Sales Crash and Supply Tightens

Fujairah’s bunker market has moved from stressed to clearly impaired. Fresh data published today showed marine fuel sales at the UAE hub fell to 158,852 cubic meters in March, about 157,300 metric tons, down more than 70% from both February and March 2025. The weakness is not just a demand story. Traders described disrupted cargo supply chains, partial loading halts after infrastructure attacks, reduced availability, and a risk environment that has made ships less willing to bunker there. Heavy fuel oil inventories at Fujairah also fell to a record low of 3.91 million barrels as of April 13, showing that the port’s bunker squeeze is being driven by both thinner stock cover and weaker vessel confidence at the same time.
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Fujairah has shifted from premium hub to disrupted bunker market
The latest market picture shows a sharp deterioration in Fujairah’s bunker trade. Marine fuel sales have collapsed, inventories are exceptionally low, supply chains have been disrupted, and shipowners are showing more caution about bunkering at the port. The result is not just higher prices. It is a weaker, thinner, less dependable market at one of the world’s most important bunkering locations.
- Demand hit: March marine fuel sales fell to a record low.
- Supply hit: heavy fuel oil inventories have dropped to record lows.
- Operating hit: loading slowdowns and conflict risk are pushing bunker demand toward other hubs.
| Fast reader take | Latest confirmed signal | Operational meaning | Negative shipping consequence | Shows up first | Closest stakeholders |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales have collapsed |
Marine fuel sales in March fell to 158,852 cubic meters, a record low and more than 70% below both February and March 2025.
record low sales
-70% month on month
-70% year on year
|
Ships are either bunkering less, delaying calls, or shifting stems to other ports. | Fujairah loses its normal role as a high-confidence refueling stop. | Lower stem volumes and more demand leakage to rival hubs. | Suppliers, traders, owners, charterers. |
| Heavy fuel oil stocks are exceptionally low |
Heavy fuel oil inventories fell to 3.91 million barrels as of April 13, a record low.
record low HFO stocks
April 13
|
Stock cover is thinner, making the market more vulnerable to another disruption or sudden lift in demand. | Prompt supply becomes harder and suppliers gain more pricing power. | Less flexibility on grades and tighter stem acceptance. | HSFO buyers, scrubber-fitted fleets, traders. |
| Infrastructure disruption changed market behavior early |
Earlier fire-related disruptions forced temporary suspensions by major storage operators and slowed bunkering operations.
partial halts
operator suspensions
slowdown after fire
|
The market deterioration did not begin with weak sales alone. It began with physical disruption to bunker handling and storage flows. | Operational reliability fell before demand fully pulled back. | Longer planning windows and more cautious supplier quoting. | Terminal operators, barging firms, bunker suppliers. |
| Premiums widened sharply during the squeeze |
Low-sulphur fuel moved to more than $30 per metric ton above Singapore, versus a more normal premium of about $10 to $15 earlier, while high-sulphur fuel also swung from discount to premium.
VLSFO premium jump
HSFO market flip
|
Fujairah stopped acting like a straightforward regional pricing point and started acting like a stress market. | Ships with flexibility are incentivized to bunker elsewhere. | Arbitrage demand shifts to Singapore, Mediterranean and Indian hubs. | Bunker buyers, traders, voyage planners. |
| Alternative hubs have already gained traffic |
Demand shifted toward ports such as Singapore, Rotterdam, Colombo and other Mediterranean and Indian locations after Fujairah’s disruption.
demand diversion
Singapore gain
other hubs benefit
|
Ships are proving that bunker demand can relocate quickly when Fujairah loses reliability. | Once volumes move, some may not return immediately even after operations improve. | Higher spot demand and firmer pricing in substitute ports. | Competing bunker hubs, global suppliers, cargo schedules. |
| The weakness is both supply-driven and risk-driven |
Traders cited disrupted cargo supply chains, partial loading halts, and heightened regional risk as reasons ships avoided bunkering there.
cargo chain disruption
risk deterrence
slow demand
|
This is not a simple price cycle. It is a confidence problem layered on top of supply stress. | Even if inventories improve, bunker volumes may lag until shipowners regain confidence in the port. | Longer recovery tail for volumes than for prices. | Owners, underwriters, bunker desks, UAE energy planners. |
Fujairah Bunker Stress Lab
This tool converts the current Fujairah bunker story into an operating stress model. It lets readers test whether the hub looks like a temporary supply pinch, a confidence-driven traffic loss, or a deeper structural weakening of one of the world’s main bunkering centers.
Stress inputs
Check the conditions that match the current Fujairah market, then fine-tune how much of the weakness is driven by stocks, operations, and confidence.
Direct pressure signals
Stabilizing signals
Fine-tune the market condition
Operational readout
The model separates supply stress from demand erosion because Fujairah’s current problem is not just one or the other. It is both.
Fujairah currently looks like a bunker market under simultaneous stock, operating, and confidence pressure.
| Stage | Market picture | Shipping behavior | Main limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 Price squeeze |
Premiums widen, but the hub still functions with limited damage. | Ships pay more but mostly keep bunkering there. | Cost pressure |
| Stage 2 Supply strain |
Stocks and operations weaken enough to affect prompt availability. | Buyers plan earlier and accept less flexibility. | Stock cover |
| Stage 3 Confidence loss |
Ships begin shifting stems away because the hub looks less dependable. | Demand starts leaking toward rival bunkering centers. | Reliability |
| Stage 4 Market deterioration |
Sales, stocks, and confidence all weaken together. | Fujairah loses part of its normal strategic pull as a bunker stop. | Recovery trust |
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