ship.energy
Magazine Features » Regulation » Chain reaction
Regulation

Chain reaction

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shipping and bunkering markets already battered by a global pandemic. Lesley Bankes-Hughes considers the initial impact of the Ukraine crisis on the energy landscape and canvasses the views of bunker industry stakeholders on a market in flux



Recently added

Decarbonising ports

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Shock to the system

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Don’t overlook SOx!

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

A weather eye

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Switched-on shipping

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Charged and ready

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Market forces

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Winning Combination

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

No one short answer

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Putting theory into practice

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

A strong long-term bet?

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Beyond the demonstration phase

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...

Keeping your options open

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has brought further volatility – and restrictions – to shi...