European firms have not been able to take direct advantage of the waiver, partly because of the time required to ship gasoline across the Atlantic.
But the waiver, by curtailing the flow of U.S. Gulf Coast gasoline to other destinations, could still result in fresh opportunities for European traders.
"I don't think there is too much buying in west Africa, but with the Jones Act waiver, that should change a bit," a European gasoline trader said.
"(The price of) U.S. Gulf Coast gasoline was very weak ... those barrels were arbing everywhere. Even west Africa."
He said the shift in Gulf Coast volumes was potentially creating an opportunity to export to west Africa instead.
A number of traders cautioned that gasoline prices in west Africa were not high enough to make it profitable for many firms. At least one said, however, that the region was still a better option than the United States.
"I am working other stuff. China, west Africa," another gasoline trader said, explaining why he did not plan to ship a single barrel of gasoline to the United States in the aftermath of the storm.
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A third trader cited Brazil as a potential market as a result of the diversion of U.S. Gulf Coast cargoes.
"Everything is so slow though. I am not holding my breath," he said this week.