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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
3MAY

ARA gasoil drops as supply rotates west

4 min read
14:52UTC

ARA gasoil stocks fell to a fresh multi-year low of 13.56mb in June as Saudi Arabia's import share collapsed to 12% from 33-37% and the Atlantic basin backfilled the gap.

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Key takeaway

ARA gasoil hit a multi-year low as supply rotated to the Atlantic, baking freight into European diesel.

Gasoil stocks at ARA, the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp storage hub that anchors northwest European product supply, fell roughly 70kbd in June to 13.56mb, a fresh multi-year low under the 13.66mb recorded on 15 June 1. ARA is where the region holds its diesel and heating oil between refinery and pump. June gasoil imports of 226kbd sourced 33% from the US and 14% from Brazil, with Saudi Arabia down to 12% from the 33-37% it supplied in prior weeks 2.

The rotation in origins matters more than the headline draw. The Atlantic basin is backfilling the Saudi gap as Middle East shipments decline over successive months, helped by a US crude draw that ran to an eighth straight week . Bunker lead-times at ARA extended to 7 to 8 days for the heavier VLSFO and HSFO grades and 6 days for LSMGO, a physical tell that barrels are arriving slower and from further away 3.

The mechanism matters for the diesel crack, the margin between crude and refined diesel that a trading desk lives on. When the marginal feedstock crosses The Atlantic rather than the Suez, the landed cost carries trans-Atlantic freight that a Hormuz reopening does not immediately remove. A desk reading the crack off the flat price misses this: the floor under European diesel is a freight-and-origin story, not a crude-price one, and it holds even if The Gulf reopens fully.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Most of Europe's diesel comes via Rotterdam, where it is stored in tanks before being distributed to forecourts and factories. Those tanks have just hit a 25-year low because the main supplier, Saudi Arabia, has been unable to ship diesel to Europe. Saudi Arabia normally fills its tankers in the Persian Gulf, but the Strait of Hormuz has been too dangerous for commercial ships, so Saudi loadings for Europe stopped. American and Brazilian suppliers have stepped in to fill the gap, but their ships have to travel much further to reach Rotterdam. That extra distance means extra cost. Higher freight costs tend to push up diesel prices in Europe, even when crude oil itself is not especially expensive. The longer the Hormuz disruption runs, the more embedded American and Brazilian freight economics become in European diesel prices.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Saudi Arabia's ARA gasoil import-share collapse from 33-37% to 12% has a single mechanical cause: Saudi Arabia routes ARA gasoil shipments via VLCC from the Persian Gulf through the Suez Canal and then on Med Aframax tankers to ARA.

That routing path passes through or near the Strait of Hormuz for the loading leg. With Hormuz effectively closed to commercial traffic (running at 5-10% of pre-war volume), Saudi loadings for European destinations are unavailable regardless of Saudi willingness to supply.

The ARA gasoil tightness then compounds through two additional channels. First, the EU sanctions alignment on Russian crude (event 2 in this briefing) eliminates the prior alternative of Russian Baltic gasoil cargoes, which were already suppressed by the 2022 EU embargo but had not fully been replaced.

Second, the Atlantic backfill (US 33%, Brazil 14%) routes on longer voyages that add freight cost to the European landed price. The ICE gasoil crack floor moves up by whatever trans-Atlantic freight adds per tonne-mile above the prior Suez-routed economics.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Extended Saudi import-share collapse will embed trans-Atlantic freight economics into European diesel landing costs for the duration of the Hormuz closure, adding £0.01-0.02 per litre of structural cost that does not recover on diplomacy alone.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    ARA VLSFO and HSFO lead-times of 7-8 days signal a secondary bunker market tightness that could disrupt commercial shipping operations calling at Northwest European ports if lead-times extend further toward 10+ days.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    US Gulf refiners and traders hold a structural export advantage while ARA stocks are below 14mb and Atlantic supply commands a premium. VLSFO export volumes from the US Gulf to ARA should increase while the supply-routing shift persists.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #10 · Hormuz opened on paper, freight said no

IndexBox / Insights Global PJK· 22 Jun 2026
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