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Iran Oil Sanctions Set to Shrink the Circle of Foreign Buyers

Bloomberg, 30 Nov 2011 – Iran faces new hurdles to getting paid for its oil as the U.S. tightens financial sanctions to deter buyers from the world’s third-largest crude exporter.


The U.S. approved additional curbs on Iran’s banking system and oil industry on Nov. 21, hoping to thwart the country’s nuclear program, and the European Union may follow. Current sanctions have led Indian importers to route payments for Iranian crude through a Turkish bank. These refiners, concerned Turkey may stop cooperating amid the latest U.S. rules, are asking banks in Russia to arrange alternatives, said three people with direct knowledge of the situation.


“The idea of the sanctions is to shrink the circle of buyers and so increase their ability to extract discounts from Iran,” said Robin Mills, an analyst at Dubai-based Manaar Energy Consulting, who worked for a decade at Royal Dutch Shell Plc in the Middle East.


The U.S. is stepping up pressure after a Nov. 8 report from the United Nations’ International Atomic Energy Agency concluded that Iran was working on a nuclear weapons program. At stake is crude supply from the OPEC nation, whose exports last year were exceeded only by those of Saudi Arabia and Russia. Oil is Iran’s main source of income, earning it billion in the first seven months of 2011, according to U.S. Energy Department estimates.


The country pumped 3.6 million barrels a day last month, a Bloomberg survey showed, and exported an average 2.58 million barrels a day in 2010, according to Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries statistics.
Embassy Stormed


Iranian protesters broke into and vandalized the British Embassy’s compound in Tehran yesterday. U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron, in a statement, said all embassy personnel had been accounted for after the attack, which he called “outrageous and indefensible.” The U.K. Foreign Office warned Britons in Iran to stay indoors and await further advice.


France has proposed that the EU ban Iranian oil, French Budget Minister Valerie Pecresse said Nov. 23. Maja Kocijancic, an EU spokeswoman, said the same day that European foreign ministers will discuss the topic at a meeting scheduled for tomorrow. Iran, which denies it is developing nuclear weapons, is already subject to some UN and EU sanctions.


“The latest measures will make it even harder for people to finance trade with Iran,” said Nick Grandage, a London-based partner at law firm Norton Rose LLP, who specializes in trade finance. Sanctions have stifled trading of Iran’s oil in London, Europe’s financial hub, and may have forced importers to pay for crude in non-dollar currencies, he said in a Nov. 22 telephone interview.
Indian, Chinese Buyers


Should Europe adopt more formal restrictions on Iranian crude, the Persian Gulf nation would likely be forced to offer oil more cheaply to refiners in Asia, its biggest market, Olivier Jakob, managing director at Oberwil, Switzerland-based Petromatrix GmbH, said in a Nov. 28 note to investors.


By targeting financial transactions and stopping short of sanctioning international trade in Iranian oil, the U.S. aims to pressure Iran without risking a surge in crude prices at a time of global economic fragility, said Mills of Manaar Energy.


Indian refiners, which got 11 percent of their imported oil from Iran in 2010, are trying to arrange a conduit for payments via Russia, said the three people familiar with the matter, declining to be identified because the talks are private.


Vladimir Lavrov, a spokesman for Russia’s central bank, declined to comment this week about the Indian effort. The U.S. sanctions against Iran are “unacceptable and violate international law,” Russia’s Foreign Ministry said Nov. 22. Turkey, which gets half its oil imports from Iran, also criticized the U.S. action.
Turkish Bank


Turkiye Halk Bankasi AS (HALKB), the Ankara-based lender Indian refiners have used to transfer cash to Iran, declined to comment on its transactions other than to say Halk complies with UN rules, according to a bank official, who cited company policy for declining to be identified.


Iran’s past flexibility over payment terms makes it an attractive supplier. The country gives Indian refiners 90 days to pay their bills, compared with 30 days from Saudi Arabia, according to the people with knowledge of those purchases. When Indian importers were unable to pay on time because of sanctions, Iran kept supplying them even as they amassed billion in unpaid invoices.


Saudi Arabia will increase oil shipments to Indian refiners next year, four people with knowledge of the plans said Nov. 15. India’s Petroleum Ministry Media Director R. C. Joshi didn’t answer two calls for comment to his mobile phone yesterday.
European Refiners


Refiners in Europe, collectively the second-largest market for Iranian oil after China, may also face difficulties from tighter constraints on transactions with Iran.


“Europe has been importing crude oil from Iran, and it certainly hasn’t lowered amounts recently,” Jakob of Petromatrix said by telephone Nov. 22. “Greece is importing most of its crude oil from Iran.”


Oil prices rose this year as political turmoil in the Middle East stoked concern about the reliability of supply. The price of European benchmark Brent crude rose to more than barrels a day in April as exports from Libya dwindled because of the rebellion in that country. Brent has risen 16 percent this year and was trading at .33 a barrel at 7:07 a.m. in London.


Iran’s three biggest national customers — China, Japan and India — together buy more than half its exported oil, according to U.S. Energy Department data. This concentration of customers and Iran’s reliance on oil sales for income make the country vulnerable to disruptions, Jakob said.
China’s Advantage


An unintended consequence is that China, a critic of the latest U.S. sanctions, may benefit from any price discounts, said Mills, the Dubai-based consultant. “It will favor non-U.S. allies who will be able to get oil somewhat more cheaply.”


China accounted for 22 percent of Iran’s export volumes in the first half of this year and increased its purchases by 27 percent over the same period of 2010, U.S. data show. The EU, Japan and India bought 18 percent, 14 percent and 13 percent of Iran’s oil, respectively.


China’s economic ties don’t violate UN Security Council resolutions, Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters on Nov. 24.


Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi said in a Nov. 19 television interview with Al Jazeera that any disruption to his nation’s oil exports would create “severe problems” for global markets. Iran abuts the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for about one-fifth of the world’s traded oil supplies.


“If Iran were to respond to outside aggression by sealing off the Straits of Hormuz, this would severely hamper exports from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates,” researchers led by David Wech at Vienna-based JBC Energy said in a Nov. 23 report.

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