19 Apr 2024
Tuesday 15 May 2018 - 12:18
Story Code : 305109

Trump orders 'significant reduction' in petroleum purchased from Iran



Sputnik - A high-profile Iranian official has pointed out that the potential US sanctions that US President Donald Trump touched upon last week have not so far affected the flow of oil supplies to international markets, despite earlier predictions.




US President Donald Trump directed his Secretaries ofState, Energy, and the Treasury tosignificantly reduce the amount ofpetroleum and petroleum products bought fromIran, according toa memorandum released bythe White House onMonday.
"I determine that there is a sufficient supply ofpetroleum and petroleum products fromcountries other thanIran topermit a significant reduction inthe volume ofpetroleum and petroleum products purchased fromIran byor throughforeign financial institutions."


However, Irans overall exports ofoil and condensate are no lower thanthe average of6 million barrels per day (m/bpd), with60 percent ofexports designated forAsia and another 40 toEurope, said Pirooz Mousavi, who heads the National Iranian Oil Terminals Company (NIOTC), ascited byPressTV newsoutlet.

Mousavi, whose NIOTC is tasked withcontrolling Irans oil export facilities, went onto say that Iran currently had no oil stored inits tankers, which means that the Islamic republic goes onselling its oil reserves, withexports asof March 2017-2018 hitting roughly 800 million barrels, IRNA reported.

In his statement he also mentioned Kharg Island, which has recently seen a number ofchanges made tothe oil sales strategy toreach a new oil exports capacity of8 million barrels ofoil and related products combined.

On May 8,Donald Trump announcedthat the US would pullout fromthe 2015 nuclear deal betweenIran and the P5+1 countries, namely the five permanent member ofthe United Nations Security Council (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States), plus Germany and the European Union.

Separately, Trump states that Washington is intending toreimpose its sanctions againstTehran, most ofwhich had applied beforethe nuclear agreement, formally known asthe Joint Comprehensive Plan ofAction (JCPOA), was struck in2015. The renewal ofsanctions is due totake between90 and 180 days, withthe most important limitation reportedly having todo withIran engaging infinancial operations withthe US dollar, aswell asIrans oil sales and other energy-related investments, including those throughthe Central Bank ofIran.

Shortly afterTrumps pullout announcement, a number ofreports byBank ofAmerica Corp suggested that the Iran-related move coupled witha dip inVenezuelas oil production will lay a heavy burden onglobal crude oil markets.
"Looking intothe next 18 months, we expect global oil supply todemand balances totighten driven bythe ongoing collapse inVenezuelan output. In addition, there are downside risks toIranian crude oil exports. Plus we see a high likelihood ofOPEC working withRussia in2019 toset a floor onoil prices," analysts wrote intheir report.


However they assume that depending onthe geopolitical situation inthe world,oil pricesmay reach a staggering $100 per barrel assoon asnext year.

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