KEY POINTS
  • Adverse weather conditions are obstructing loading operations at Turkey's Ceyhan port, following twin Monday earthquakes that rattled Turkey and Syria, leaving over 5,000 dead.
  • Damage at the port is still being assessed.
  • The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline and the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline that bring crude oil for Ceyhan export were not impacted.
A satellite image showing the port of Ceyhan centred on August 18, 2015 in Turkey.

Adverse weather conditions are obstructing loading operations at Turkey's Ceyhan port, where the impact of Monday's immense twin earthquakes is still being assessed, according to oil traders and shipping sources.

Operations were interrupted at the Ceyhan oil port — a critical hub for the discharge of crude oil and oil products, along with the loading of Azeri crude and a stream of Iraqi crude oil — on Monday, following two earthquakes that devastated Turkey and Syria, leaving over 5,000 dead. Turkey has declared a three-month state of emergency at regions struck by the earthquakes.