Tanker Carrying Fuel Originally Bound for Cuba Diverts to Trinidad, Shipping Data Shows

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  • Vessel Sea Horse had loaded a Russia-origin cargo earlier this year
  • US Treasury said a waiver to Russian ​cargoes does not cover sales to Cuba

March 20 (Reuters) – A ‌tanker carrying fuel originally bound for Cuba on Friday changed its destination to Trinidad and Tobago, according to LSEG ship-tracking data, a blow for the island amid ​a severe fuel scarcity that has triggered power blackouts.

The Hong ​Kong-flagged vessel Sea Horse loaded a diesel cargo earlier this ⁠year through a ship-to-ship transfer in the Mediterranean before setting sail to ​the Caribbean.


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The Russian-origin cargo was bound for Cuba, according to several maritime ​intelligence firms, but the ship had suspended course in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean since late February.

The tanker has changed course and is heading south to ​Trinidad, with an estimated arrival on Monday, according to the LSEG data.

The ​U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday changed the terms of a waiver it had granted ‌to ⁠sales of Russian-origin crude and petroleum products already loaded on tankers to specifically exclude transactions involving North Korea, Cuba and Crimea. The license is part of the Trump administration’s effort to tame high crude and gas ​prices amid the ​Middle East conflict.

Russia’s ⁠state-run TASS news agency said this week the Russian government is in talks with Cuba about aid options, ​without providing further details.

Power blackouts are now the norm ​in ⁠Cuba, which has received only two tankers at its ports this year, bringing oil, LSEG data showed.

The Communist-run island needs imported fuel oil and diesel ⁠to ​generate power and avoid more outages, while ​gasoline sales remain strictly rationed and sold on the black market for $8 per liter, six times ​the official price.

Reporting by Marianna Parraga; Editing by Kylie Madry, Rod Nickel

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