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Bunkering & Changeover

Why Bunkering Is One of the Highest-Risk Operations on Board

Bunkering is deceptively simple: fuel goes from supplier to ship.

In reality, it is one of the most hazardous, regulated, and commercially sensitive operations carried out during a vessel’s lifecycle.

A single bunkering or changeover failure can result in:

  • Engine blackout
  • Pollution incident
  • Fire or explosion
  • Off-hire, detention, or charterparty disputes
  • Long-term machinery damage that appears weeks later

This article explains every major aspect of bunkering and fuel changeover, from equipment and methods to legal, operational, and human-factor risks—written for cadets through to Chief Engineers, Masters, ports, and shore-side technical staff.

This page sets the operational framework.

Detailed chemistry, purification theory, and injection behaviour are handled in later sections.

Table of Contents

  1. What Is Bunkering (Modern Definition)
  2. Where Bunkering Happens (Global Context)
  3. Types of Bunkering Operations
  4. Fuels Supplied During Bunkering
  5. Bunkering Equipment – Ship, Shore & Bunker Vessel
  6. Pre-Bunkering Planning & Risk Assessment
  7. The Bunkering Operation – Step by Step
  8. Sampling, Documentation & Disputes
  9. Fuel Changeover – Why It’s More Dangerous Than Bunkering
  10. Changeover Methods & Systems
  11. Common Failures & Blackout Scenarios
  12. Legal, Commercial & Regulatory Context
  13. Who Is Responsible – Ship, Supplier, Charterer
  14. How This Fits the Fuels Section

1. What Is Bunkering

Bunkering is the supply of fuel (“bunker”) to ships for propulsion and auxiliary machinery, including:

  • Logistics
  • Transfer
  • Storage
  • Measurement
  • Documentation
  • Initial onboard handling

The term originates from steamships, where coal was stored in bunkers. Today it refers almost exclusively to liquid and gaseous marine fuels.

A professional involved in buying and selling marine fuel is known as a bunker trader.

2. Where Bunkering Happens ?

Bunkering occurs:

  • Alongside terminals
  • At anchorages
  • Offshore
  • At sea (ship-to-ship)

Major Global Bunkering Hubs

  • Port of Singapore
    World’s largest bunkering port
    2023 sales: ~51.8 million tonnes
  • Malta
    Strategic STS bunkering hub (Hurd’s Bank)
  • Rotterdam, Fujairah, Houston, Zhoushan (regional hubs)

Ports are no longer just fuel suppliers—they are fuel strategy enablers for LNG, methanol, and future fuels.

3. Types of Bunkering Operations

3.1 Ship-to-Ship (STS) Bunkering

  • Bunker barge alongside receiving vessel
  • Most common method worldwide
  • Flexible, high-volume capable
  • Requires careful mooring, fendering, and communication

3.2 Port-to-Ship (PTS) / Terminal-to-Ship

  • Pipeline from shore tank to vessel
  • Very high transfer rates
  • Typically used at major terminals
  • Lower spill risk but less flexibility

3.3 Truck-to-Ship (TTS)

  • Road tanker delivers fuel
  • Common for small vessels, ports, inland waterways
  • Limited volume
  • High dependency on local regulations

3.4 Stern-Line Bunkering (SLB)

  • Fuel transferred astern via hose
  • Used in restricted anchorages
  • Higher risk in poor weather
  • Requires strict operational discipline

4. Fuels Supplied During Bunkering

Typical fuels bunkered:

  • HFO / HSFO
  • VLSFO
  • MGO / DMA
  • ULSFO
  • LNG (cryogenic transfer)
  • Methanol (increasingly common)
  • Biofuel blends

Each fuel:

  • Requires different transfer procedures
  • Has different contamination risks
  • Dictates changeover complexity

5. Bunkering Equipment – Ship, Shore & Bunker Vessel

Onboard Equipment

  • Bunker manifolds (clearly marked)
  • Drip trays & save-alls
  • Bunker hoses / reducers
  • Tank level gauging systems
  • Overflow & vent arrangements
  • Sounding pipes
  • Emergency stop systems

Bunker Vessel / Shore Equipment

  • Transfer pumps
  • Flow meters / mass flow meters (MFM)
  • Sampling points
  • Emergency shutdown valves
  • Spill containment gear

Equipment condition matters as much as procedures.

Many spills originate from gaskets, blanks, or hose failures.

6. Pre-Bunkering Planning & Risk Assessment

Before fuel transfer:

  • Bunker checklist completed (ship & supplier)
  • Quantities and grades confirmed
  • Tanks designated and segregated
  • Overflow paths verified
  • Communication language agreed
  • Emergency signals established
  • Weather and traffic assessed

Key rule:

If you don’t know exactly where the fuel is going, do not start pumping.

7. The Bunkering Operation – Step by Step

  1. Manifold connection and pressure test
  2. Initial slow pumping (“line filling”)
  3. Tank changeover confirmation
  4. Increase to agreed rate
  5. Continuous monitoring:
    • Tank levels
    • Soundings
    • Pump pressure
  6. Final topping-off at reduced rate
  7. Completion, draining, disconnection
  8. Hose blanking and cleanup

Human error during tank changeover is one of the most common spill causes.

8. Sampling, Documentation & Disputes

Sampling types:

  • MARPOL sample
  • Commercial sample
  • Ship’s retained sample
  • Supplier retained sample

Documents:

  • Bunker Delivery Note (BDN)
  • Time logs
  • Meter readings
  • Seal numbers

Fuel disputes often hinge on:

  • Incorrect sampling location
  • Poor sealing
  • Missing timestamps
  • Incomplete logs

9. Fuel Changeover – Why It’s More Dangerous Than Bunkering

Changeover is where most blackouts occur.

Risks include:

  • Viscosity mismatch
  • Thermal shock
  • Wax precipitation
  • Fuel pump seizure
  • Injector sticking
  • Air ingress

Changeover is not a paperwork task—it is an engine operation.

10. Changeover Methods & Systems

Manual Changeover

  • Operator controlled
  • High awareness required
  • Common on older vessels

Automated Changeover Systems

  • Temperature-controlled blending
  • Flow-regulated transition
  • Alarm-driven safeguards

Critical parameters:

  • Temperature gradient
  • Viscosity at engine inlet
  • Fuel pressure stability
  • Return fuel routing

11. Common Failures & Blackout Scenarios

  • Switching to cold MGO too quickly
  • Mixing incompatible VLSFO batches
  • Air drawn during tank depletion
  • Wax dropout in cold climates
  • Incorrect valve lineup

Many blackouts occur hours after changeover, not immediately.

12. Legal, Commercial & Regulatory Context

Bunkering is embedded in maritime law:

  • Charterparty obligations
  • Seaworthiness requirements
  • Deviation rules
  • Insurance coverage

Regulation driven by International Maritime Organization through:

  • MARPOL Annex VI
  • IMO 2020

Running out of fuel or non-compliant bunkering can:

  • Void insurance
  • Trigger off-hire
  • Lead to detention or salvage claims

13. Who Is Responsible?

PartyResponsibility
SupplierFuel supplied to spec
ShipSafe transfer & handling
ChartererFuel selection (often)
MasterOverall safety
Chief EngineerTechnical execution
PortEnvironmental compliance

Responsibility overlaps—but failure is rarely shared equally.

14. How This Fits the Fuels Section

This article connects directly to:

  • Storage, Heating & Transfer → system design
  • Purification & Treatment → post-bunkering defence
  • Fuel Injection Systems → consequences of bad changeover
  • Faults & Troubleshooting → blackout analysis
  • Environmental & MARPOL VI → compliance enforcement

Key Takeaway

In the simpliest of terms bunkering puts fuel on board.

Changeover decides whether the ship survives it.