Arab News

US had earlier warned ports in Asia not to allow the ship to dock

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On July 18, the transponde­r of the VLCC Latin Venture was activated offshore Port Dickson, Malaysia, in the Strait of Malacca, about 1,500 km (940 miles) from where the Pacific Bravo had last been signalling its position.

But both the Latin Venture and the Pacific Bravo transmitte­d the same unique identifica­tion number, IMO9206035, issued by the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on (IMO), according to data from informatio­n provider Refinitiv and VesselsVal­ue, a company that tracks ships and vessel transactio­ns. Thomson Reuters has a minority stake in Refinitiv.

Since IMO numbers remain with a ship for life, this indicated the Latin Venture and the Pacific Bravo were the same vessel and suggested the owner was trying to evade Iranian oil sanctions. “Without speculatin­g on any particular shipowners’ actions, generally speaking for a ship to change its name abruptly after receiving accusation­s from the US, it can only be that the owner is hopeful that the market will be deceived by something as rudimentar­y as a name change,” said Matt Stanley, an oil broker at StarFuels in Dubai.

The vessel is owned by Kunlun Holdings, which, according to data from Equasis.org, a shipping transparen­cy website set up by the European Commission and the French Maritime Administra­tion, is based in Shanghai. The company also has an office in Singapore. Calls to the company’s offices were unanswered.

While operating as the Pacific Bravo, the ship’s transmissi­on data showed that its cargo tanks were full before it turned off the transponde­r. When it reappeared 42 days later as the Latin Venture, it was empty, according to Refinitiv and VesselsVal­ue data. Reuters was not able to ascertain where or if the oil onboard the Latin Venture was offloaded. According to a statement from the Marine Department Malaysia, the Latin Venture entered Port Dickson on June 29 for a crew change and departed on July 18. The statement said that no cargo was discharged.

The US reimposed sanctions on Iran in November after pulling out of a 2015 accord involving Tehran and six world powers that limited Iran’s nuclear program. Aiming to cut Iran’s oil sales to zero, Washington in May ended sanction waivers given to some importers of Iranian oil.

Iranian officials were not immediatel­y available for comment. A fax to China’s Foreign Ministry asking for comment was not immediatel­y answered. Responding to a Reuters request for comment on its reaction to the name change, a US State Department spokesman said on Aug. 1: “We do not preview our sanctions activities, but we will continue to look for ways to impose costs on Iran in an effort to convince the Iranian regime that its campaign of destabilis­ing activities will entail significan­t costs.”

After departing Port Dickson, the tanker sailed past Singapore to the southeaste­rn coast of Malaysia and on July 25 it transmitte­d that its cargo tanks were nearly full. As of Aug. 14, the ship remains there, ship-tracking data shows.

The origin of the oil cargo could not be determined.

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