Commodities April 23, 2026 02:12 PM

Foreign-Flagged Tanker Moves U.S. Crude Under Temporary Jones Act Waiver

Malta-flagged HTM Warrior transported Bakken crude from Beaumont, Texas to Monroe Energy's Trainer refinery after a 60-day waiver allowed foreign vessels to carry fuel between U.S. ports

By Sofia Navarro
Foreign-Flagged Tanker Moves U.S. Crude Under Temporary Jones Act Waiver

On April 23, a Malta-flagged tanker completed a cross-country delivery of U.S. crude from Phillips 66’s Beaumont terminal to Monroe Energy’s Trainer refinery in Pennsylvania under a temporary Jones Act waiver issued by President Donald Trump. Ship tracking data from Kpler and LSEG show the HTM Warrior loaded light, sweet Bakken crude in early April and discharged the cargo last week. The administration announced a 60-day waiver in March to ease supply disruptions tied to the Iran war and is reportedly weighing an extension.

Key Points

  • The Malta-flagged HTM Warrior loaded light, sweet Bakken crude at Phillips 66’s Beaumont, Texas terminal in early April and discharged it at Monroe Energy’s Trainer refinery in Pennsylvania last week - data from Kpler and LSEG confirm the movements.
  • In March the Trump administration issued a 60-day waiver of the 1920 Jones Act, temporarily allowing foreign-flagged vessels to move fuel, fertilizer and other goods between U.S. ports to address supply disruptions and rising prices tied to the Iran war.
  • The administration is reportedly considering an extension of the Jones Act waiver, a decision that could affect fuel distribution logistics and fertilizer supply chains in the near term.

April 23 - A foreign-flagged oil tanker moved a shipment of U.S. crude between domestic ports under a temporary exemption to the Jones Act, according to ship tracking data and recent government action. The vessel, identified as the Malta-flagged HTM Warrior, loaded light, sweet Bakken crude from Phillips 66’s terminal in Beaumont, Texas in early April and offloaded that cargo at Monroe Energy’s Trainer refinery in Pennsylvania last week, data from Kpler and LSEG showed.

The movement took place after the Trump administration in March enacted a 60-day waiver of the 1920 Jones Act shipping statute. The waiver temporarily permits foreign-flagged ships to transport fuel, fertilizer and other goods between U.S. ports - an allowance that is ordinarily restricted to U.S.-built, -owned and -crewed vessels under the law.

Officials framed the exemption as an emergency measure intended to blunt price rises and supply disruptions tied to the Iran war. The waiver was described by the administration as a response to an acute situation that had contributed to a sharp increase in gasoline prices and interruptions in critical fertilizer deliveries to U.S. farmers.

Ship tracking information from Kpler and LSEG provides the operational detail behind the movement: the HTM Warrior, flying the Maltese flag, took on Bakken crude in Beaumont in early April and later discharged the load at Monroe Energy’s Trainer refinery in Pennsylvania during the prior week. The shipment is notable because such domestic moves by foreign-flagged tankers are rare absent a Jones Act exemption.

The administration is considering whether to extend the 60-day waiver, according to a report by Axios that cited U.S. officials. That consideration follows the initial emergency decision announced in March.


Context and implications

The temporary waiver allowed a one-time operational workaround to move crude and refined products between U.S. ports using a foreign-flagged vessel. While the waiver is time-limited, its use has immediate implications for refining logistics and agricultural supply chains that rely on fertilizer deliveries, as well as for fuel markets sensitive to supply constraints.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over whether the Jones Act waiver will be extended - impacts shipping, refining logistics and agricultural inputs such as fertilizer.
  • Supply disruptions and elevated gasoline prices linked to the Iran war - affects consumer fuel costs and refinery throughput decisions.

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