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Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Business
Sheela Tobben

Sentinel Sees New US Dock for Oil Supertankers Ready in 2026

In this aerial drone view from a drone, a petroleum tanker ship passes through the Aransas Channel from the Gulf of Mexico enroute to the Port of Corpus Christi on May 27, 2020 in Port Aransas, Texas. The channel and port are currently being expanded to accommodate VLCCs (very large crude carriers) which will allow larger ships, capable of carrying a greater amount and wider variety of goods, to access the port. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images) (Photographer: Tom Pennington/Getty Images North America)

With US crude increasingly leaving American shores on oversized supertankers, private equity backed Sentinel Midstream LLC is looking to get in on the action, bringing its new deep-water port online in 2026.

The closely held company’s proposed Texas oil dock that will cater to the world’s largest vessels is expecting to receive all permits by next year’s first quarter, with construction to follow, said Sentinel’s Chief Executive Officer Jeff Ballard. Dubbed Texas GulfLink, the port aims to load up to 1 million barrels of oil per day, helping to usher in the massive growth in US crude exports expected by the end of the decade.  

Crude shipments from the US Gulf, the nation’s main export hub, will expand by roughly 2 million barrels a day to about 5.5 million by 2030, Ballard said in an interview. The so-called very large crude carriers, or VLCCs, that will use the dock can haul 2 million barrels of oil. 

Historically, the US has used VLCCs only for longer routes, like between the Gulf Coast and Asia, with shipments to Europe moving on smaller ships carrying up to 1 million barrels. However, the large vessels are increasingly popular on even shorter routes, especially as Russia’s war disrupts energy flows and forces buyers to seek out alternative suppliers.

The project by Cresta Fund Management-backed Sentinel is one of four proposed ports looking to cash in on a growing and lucrative export market for US crude.

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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