Kuwait Times

Syria crisis eases as Iran delivers new oil supplies

-

AMMAN: Iran has delivered several gasoline and crude oil shipments to Syria, easing a near two-month gasoline shortage aggravated by tougher US sanctions, shippers, port officials and traders said.

A vessel began unloading 38,000 tons of gasoline at the Baniyas oil terminal on Monday, three weeks after another ship carrying Iranian crude unloaded its one million barrel cargo, three shippers and a Damascus-based businessma­n familiar with the shipment told Reuters. In addition an Iranian vessel carrying another 1 million barrels off-loaded its cargo in the Mediterran­ean to two smaller vessels for delivery to Syria, a Beirut-based shipper and a Amman-based regional shipper also said

Those cargoes were delivered two weeks ago, they said. Oil Minister Bassam Touma had said in September that The Caesar Act - the toughest US sanctions which came into force last June prohibitin­g foreign companies trading with Damascus - had disrupted several imported shipments from undisclose­d suppliers. A halving of Iranian deliveries in the last four months purchased by Damascus under credit lines and barter deals with Tehran worsened the chronic shortages, another three shippers said.

They said Iran’s preference to step up cash sales to Asian customers rather than supply its ally Damascus on credit was a factor behind the reduced supplies. Iran’s own economy has also been struggling from the impact of US sanctions and the coronaviru­s pandemic. Data from TankerTrac­kers, which tracks shipments and oil storage, showed a spike in Iranian exports last month in defiance of US sanctions. Syrian oil production collapsed after Damascus lost most of its oil producing fields in the eastern part of the country, east the Euphrates River in Deir Al-Zor.

During the nearly decade old conflict it has relied on its ally Iran for an average of 70,000 barrels per day - almost half of its needs - but supplies have been falling in the past year with tightening sanctions and Tehran seeking cash exports, according to industry experts.— Reuters

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait