Iran Oil Exports Slump 46% as US Sanctions Bite
Iranian oil tankers are contending with longer
delays in shipments and some are idled amid increasing pressure on buyers to
curb purchases from what was once OPEC’s second-biggest producer.
NITC, the Tehran-based tanker owner, has 42 crude
oil carriers and 13 were delayed in transit since Oct. 21, according to data
compiled by Richard Hurley, a senior maritime consultant at IHS Fairplay in London who has tracked vessel movements for two
decades. Four NITC ships with cargoes are idling while they await orders and
four others have switched off their signals and are presumed to be anchored,
the data show.
Iran is reliant on NITC ships because EU
sanctions imposed in July barred about 95 percent of
the global tanker fleet from carrying the nation’s crude. NITC has renamed
vessels, switched their flag states and signaled
inaccurate information about where they are registered, according to the data
from IHS, which maintains the United Nations’ shipping database.
Nuclear Program
Oil exports from Iran slumped 46 percent this year compared with 2011, according to data
from Clarkson Plc (CKN), the world’s largest
shipbroker. No NITC vessels delivered cargoes to Turkey since Nov. 22
or to India since Nov. 12, according to data from IHS Fairplay,
a unit of Englewood, Colorado-based IHS Inc. (IHS) Banks in countries
that fail to cut imports risk losing access to dollars under a U.S. law that
took effect June 28. China and India have waivers that expire this month.
The U.S. and 27-nation EU want to curb Iran’s
nuclear activities, which they say are aimed at producing weapons, a charge the
government in Tehran has denied. The sanctions are costing Iran about $98.9
million a day in lost oil sales. The exports once provided about half of
government revenue.
Signals from 31 NITC tankers show they are
registered in Tanzania-Zanzibar, according to IHS data. A Zanzibar government
official said in October that no Iranian ships were registered in the east
African territory and the country’s ship registry confirmed the vessels aren’t
entitled to fly the flag.
Satellite Signals
The Baikal, an NITC vessel that called at the Greek
island of Syros last week, was flying the Tanzanian flag, according to
Panayiotis Karamitsos, the local harbor
master. It left without unloading or refueling. The
Majestic, another NITC vessel, was sighted by an IHS employee near Singapore on
Nov. 24 with its stern painted to show it was flagged in Zanzibar, Hurley said.
NITC tankers are also signaling
that they are classified by the Korean Register of Shipping, Germany’s Germanischer Lloyd or France’s Bureau Veritas, according to IHS data. The three so- called
classification societies, which verify compliance with international safety and
security rules, have said they are no longer providing services to Iranian
vessels or intend to end the relationship. One NITC ship isn’t signaling a known classification society.
The International Monetary Fund said in October it
expected Iran’s economy to contract 0.9 percent this
year. The forecast was based on data from before the slump in the country’s rial, which “will likely have a further negative impact on
economic outcomes in the coming year,”Masood Ahmed,
head of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia department, said in an interview
in Dubai on Nov. 11.