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S&P Global on Friday said its Platts commodities unit will launch a daily freight assessment in October for Aframax ships moving between Vancouver and the U.S. West Coast.

Trans Mountain pipeline expansion began commercial operations in May, nearly tripling, to 890,000 barrels a day, the flow of crude from landlocked Alberta to Canada’s Pacific coast.

The assessment will be for 80,000 metric ton Aframaxes and comes as the recent startup of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion has boosted shipments on the route.

Aframaxes, which can weight up to 120,000 metric tons and carry about 800,000 barrels, only load about 550,000 barrels at the Westridge terminal in Vancouver due to draft restrictions.

Most of those cargoes have headed to refineries along the U.S. Gulf Coast, including Marathon Petroleum’s Los Angeles Refinery, Valero Energy’s Benicia refinery, Chevron Corp’s El Segundo refinery and Phillips 66′s Ferndale refinery.

Just over 92 per cent of all Aframax ships loading Trans Mountain Pipeline barrels at Westridge terminal since the startup either discharged onshore U.S. West Coast or offshore at the Pacific Area Lightering terminal, where the crude is transferred onto super tankers for final delivery into Asia, according to S&P Global Commodities at Sea data.

“Spot freight market activity has ramped up significantly since the expansion began commercial operations May 1,” Platts wrote in its note.

The freight assessment will reflect the cost of voyages on Aframaxes delivering barrels directly to U.S. West Coast refineries unloading at Long Beach in California, as well as for Aframaxes shuttling crude to Pacific Lightering Area, Platts said.

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