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Unknown Indian company shipping millions of barrels of Russian oil
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IANS | 05 May, 2023
From the rundown Neptune Magnet Mall in Mumbai, a giant of international
oil shipping has emerged over the past 18 months, seemingly from
nowhere. Since Russia invaded Ukraine, the company has bought more oil
tankers than anyone else, elevating itself from an unknown Indian
shipping business into one of the worlds largest vessel owners, a media
report said.
Gatik Ship Management owned just two
chemical tankers in 2021. By April, it had acquired a fleet of 58
vessels with an estimated combined value of $1.6 billion, The Financial
Times report said citing shipping experts VesselsValue.
Yet the origins and ownership of the business are a mystery, while its corporate records are scant.
The
group was registered as an exporter in India on March 31 this year but
does not appear in India's official corporate registry, The Financial
Times reported.
One important clue is that Gatik shares an
address in the dreary shopping mall with Mumbai-registered company Buena
Vista Shipping, another little-known operation that two years ago
reported a little over $100,000 worth of assets.
Who really owns
Buena Vista Shipping and who funded the rapid expansion of Gatik's fleet
has perplexed the oil market. But shipbrokers, analysts and commodity
traders suspect a link with its biggest client: the Russian oil giant
Rosneft, Financial Times reported.
Gatik's newly acquired fleet
has been used largely to transport oil from Russia, mainly to ports in
India, tanker tracking data shows.
A Financial Times analysis of
data from Kpler, an analytics company, shows the Indian group has
shipped at least 83 million barrels of Russian crude and oil products --
enough to meet total UK oil demand for more than two months.
More than half of that has come from Rosneft. Total figures are believed to be even larger than those in Kpler's data set.
"It
was inevitable after the west's sanctions that the Russian oil
companies would want to get into shipping and I think Gatik is the
ultimate example of this happening," said Viktor Katona, head of crude
analysis at Kpler, the report said.
The EU has imposed a series
of restrictions on Russian crude, most recently a price cap on oil
handled by European companies; Rosneft's largest customers, Trafigura
and Vitol, ditched their agreements with it last year.
Following
the sanctions, New Delhi has opted to increase its imports of Russian
oil, rather than itself imposing sanctions or observing a price cap
imposed by the G7.
That is the context in which Gatik emerged.
VesselsValue,
which tracks tanker sales, calculates that Gatik has acquired at least
56 vessels since March 2022, including 13 vessels in December alone when
the EU's embargo on Russian oil began.
The purchases put Gatik among the largest tanker owners in the world, according to VesselsValue's Rebecca Galanopoulos.
"To
put this into perspective, out of almost 14,000 live tankers, the
majority of these companies -- 1,361 -- own fewer than 10 live tankers;
only 20 companies, including Gatik, own 50 or more."
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| Customs Exchange Rates |
| Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
₹94.25
|
₹92.55 |
UK Pound
|
₹125.95
|
₹121.95 |
Euro
|
₹108.95
|
₹105.3 |
| Japanese
Yen |
₹59.4 |
₹57.6 |
| As on 02 Apr, 2026 |
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