Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Oil slips as U.S. sanctions on Iran begin, Tehran defiant

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„U.S. sanctions against Iran’s fuel exports start

„Washington grants temporary waivers to key buyers

„Iran says it will break

sanctions and still sell oil „U.S., Russia, Saudi output rises

(London) REUTERS: Oil prices fell yesterday as U.S. sanctions against Iran’s fuel exports were softened by waivers allowing major buyers to import Iranian crude for a while, while Tehran said it would defy Washington and continue to sell.

Brent crude oil was down 25 cents a barrel at US $ 72.58 by 1130 GMT. U.S. light crude was 35 cents lower at US $ 62.79 a barrel.

Both oil benchmarks have lost more than 15 percent since hitting four-year highs in early October, as hedge funds have cut bullish bets on crude to a one-year low.

Washington imposed sanctions against Iran yesterday, restoring measures lifted under a 2015 nuclear deal negotiated by the administra­tion of former U.S. President Barack Obama and adding 300 new designatio­ns including Iran’s oil, shipping, insurance and banking sectors.

In response, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said in a speech broadcast on state TV that Iran would break the sanctions and continue to sell oil.

And Washington said on Friday it will temporaril­y allow eight importers to keep buying Iranian oil.

“U.S. sanctions against Iran ... created serious concerns with traders earlier in September. But they are turning into a damp squib,” said Fiona Cincotta, market analyst at City Index.

Washington has so far not identified the eight. China, India, South Korea, Turkey, Italy, the United Arab Emirates and Japan have been the top importers of Iran’s oil, while Taiwan also occasional­ly buys Iranian crude.

South Korea said yesterday it had been granted a waiver, at least temporaril­y, to import condensate, a super-light form of crude oil, from Iran. It was also allowed to continue financial transactio­ns with the Middle East country, it said.

China’s foreign ministry expressed regret at the U.S. decision but would not directly say if China had or had not been granted an exemption.

Oil markets have been anticipati­ng the sanctions for months and the world’s biggest producers have been increasing output.

Joint output from Russia, the United States and Saudi Arabia rose above 33 million barrels per day (bpd) for the first time in October, up 10 million bpd since 2010, with all three pumping at or near record volumes.

In the Middle East, the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co plans to increase its oil production capacity to 4 million bpd by the end of 2020 and to five million bpd by 2030, it said on Sunday, from output of just over three million bpd.

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