Iran Daily

Iran’s crude exports hit 2.25 mbd in September

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Domestic Economy Desk

Iran exported 2.25 million barrels per day (mbd) of crude oil to Asian and European clients in September, data released by the Oil Ministry showed on Saturday.

The country also shipped 430,000 bpd of condensate to its customers in Asia with South Korea taking half of the cargoes of the superlight form of crude, it added, Press TV reported.

China and India remained the prime recipients of Iranian crude lifting more than 1 mbd combined, despite reports that New Delhi was cutting purchases from the Islamic Republic.

The ministry figures did not give a breakdown of how much oil each country bought from Iran.

India bought an average of 450,000 bpd of Iranian oil between the beginning of 2017 and the end of August. Indian oil imports from Iran hit a record high in July, when the country’s refineries purchased 500,000 barrels a day.

US energy dominance agenda

Refineries in India are reported to have been told to cut imports from Iran in possible retaliatio­n for Tehran not awarding a gas field developmen­t to Indian companies. However, Saturday’s figures showed the purchases are rather steady.

On Thursday, US Energy Secretary Rick Perry announced that the first-ever cargo of US crude oil had arrived in India as part of President Donald Trump’s energy dominance agenda.

US Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke said last week the agenda would consider using US oil to supplant Iran’s oil wealth. The US ‘economic leverage’, he said, would work to “supplant every drop of crude that Iran produces ... and energy dominance is part of that”.

The Islamic Republic has painstakin­gly been ramping up oil production to regain its market share which the country lost under the most intensifie­d sanctions in 2011.

The Oil Ministry’s figures for September show Iran is already within the presanctio­n target level.

Meanwhile, Iran’s light crude rose $2.02 in the week to September 29 to trade at $57 a barrel, IRNA reported. Iranian heavy crude climbed $1.49 to $54.53, it added.

According to the Oil Ministry, 60 percent of Iran’s oil exports go to Asia and the remaining 40 percent to European countries which resumed purchases from the Islamic Republic about two years ago.

Royal Dutch Shell, France’s Total, Italy’s Eni and Saras, Greece’s Hellenic Petroleum, Spain’s Repsol, and Hungary’s MOL are some of Iran’s customers which have lifted about 720,000 bpd of oil since the start of the year.

China is the biggest customer of the Iranian oil, shipping more than 600,000 bpd since the beginning of the year.

Condensate exports

South Korea is the biggest client for Iran’s condensate with 300,000 bpd of imports on top of 100,000 bpd of crude oil which it has bought on average from the country since the start of the year.

National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) has reportedly informed buyers in Asia that it would reduce condensate exports in October because of maintenanc­e at the South Pars Gas Field.

IRNA, however, said Iran “intends to consume gas condensate in the country to meet domestic needs in line with the implementa­tion of the ‘resistance economy’ program and prevention of sales of unprocesse­d raw materials”.

Under the Sixth Developmen­t Plan (2017-22), all the gas condensate produced in Iran is to be consumed internally.

The Persian Gulf Star Refinery is a new gas condensate refinery being developed near Bandar Abbas. It will have a processing capacity of roughly 360,000 barrels of gas condensate a day once fully operationa­l in 2018.

Officials say the refinery will produce high-quality gasoline in order to make Iran self-sufficient in gasoline production. It will also enable the nation to export gasoline and other high-value products.

The refinery is currently operating with about 100,000 barrels per day of condensate supplied from the South Pars offshore gas field.

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