Why the long route buys time
The fairest comparison holds tanker size constant and changes only distance. A long voyage commits more cargoes before the disruption even begins.
Longer route, more overlapping cargoes
The blue line shows ships already underway. The amber line shows how many fuel-days are already afloat. Both are labeled directly at the current route.
What the route looks like on the water
The benchmark lane stays visible on the left while the current route stays visible on the right. The buttons only change emphasis, so your friend can compare both trains of tankers at once.
10 days on water
A short voyage only keeps about one cargo overlapping offshore at a time.
10 days on water
This lane shows the route your controls currently describe.
Three things your friend should notice
The point is not that distance creates fuel. The point is that distance shifts some of the storage system offshore, onto ships that are already underway.
1. Distance creates overlap
A short route only needs about one cargo in motion at a time. A longer route needs several cargoes overlapping across the lane.
2. Overlap becomes inventory
Those overlapping ships are not theory. They are real fuel-days already purchased, loaded, and sailing toward the importer.
3. The cutoff hurts later
When departures stop, arrivals continue until the last already-sailing tanker docks. That arrival tail is longer on long routes.