Arab Times

Iran crude exports ‘drop’ as more sanctions kick in

Japan’s Iran oil imports fall 29.5% y/y

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LONDON, Feb 28, (RTRS): Iran’s crude oil exports fell in January from a post-sanctions high in the previous month, analysts and shipping sources said, due to refinery maintenanc­e in China and the onset of another round of US sanctions.

Exports dropped to around 1.1 million barrels per day (bpd) in January, according to three industry sources who track oil flows and shipping and country import data compiled by Reuters.

The January figure represents a drop from at least 1.4 million bpd in December and indicates a rebound at the end of 2012 could be short-lived. It is also around 200,000 bpd lower than an initial Reuters estimate of Iranian exports in January.

“There was a little bit of a pick-up in the fourth quarter, but it has come right down again,” said a source with a major oil company who declined to be identified. “My suspicion is things are getting worse rather than better.”

Western sanctions aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear programme halved Iran’s oil exports in 2012 from 2.2 million bpd in 2011, leading to billions of dollars in lost revenue and a plunge in the Iranian currency.

Still, robust demand from top buyer China and others such as India and Japan, as well as the purchase of new tankers, allowed the Islamic Republic unexpected­ly to boost exports to at least 1.4 million bpd in December.

But shipments have started 2013 sharply lower than December’s rate, which was the highest since shortly before European Union sanctions on Iran took effect last July.

“We think January exports dropped to around 1.0 million bpd, mainly because of lower imports from China due to refinery maintenanc­e,” said analysts at consultanc­y FGE, providing the lowest estimate for January.

Two of the sources said Iranian shipments came under further downward pressure in February — although with the caveat that little data was available yet. A new round of US sanctions took effect earlier this month.

As well as the recent tightening of sanctions, natural declines at ageing oilfields have for a number of years weighed on Iranian supply, analysts say.

“I don’t think they have the financial resources or the equipment to keep up their output,” said Paul Tossetti, senior energy adviser at PFC Energy, who expects to see February supply down slightly.

Official Chinese data showed the country bought 310,000 bpd of Iranian crude in January, the lowest in 10 months. The biggest reduction in Iranian exports in January was to China.

The overall level of Iranian exports in January looks to be slightly higher than the lowest estimates. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency, which advises 28 industrial­ized countries, earlier in February said exports could have fallen below 1 million bpd in January.

To be sure, estimates of Iranian exports can vary considerab­ly and are often revised. Keeping track of them has become more difficult since the tightening of sanctions in 2012.

The IEA, in its Feb 13 report, said Iranian production could fall in coming months after the implementa­tion of new sanctions on Feb 6 by the United States.

The new sanctions effectivel­y bar Iran

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