FNA - Head of the Iranian Parliament's National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh blasted the US for ending waivers on Iran's oil exports for certain countries, and said Iranians will change sanctions into an opportunity for the country.
"The way to combat sanctions is to convert the situation into an opportunity," the senior Iranian lawmaker said.
Falahatpisheh, meantime, said that by establishing refineries and petrochemical companies besides activating the private sector, Iran should convert its sanctioned oil to products which are exempted from sanctions.
He reiterated that under the present conditions that Iran cannot export oil, it should change it into oil products by establishing refineries and petrochemical companies besides activating the private sector.
Last Monday, the White House announced that the United States will end Iran sanction waivers. According to a statement from the Office of the Press Secretary, Trump “has decided not to reissue Significant Reduction Exceptions (SREs) when they expire in early May".
Countries that do not stop buying oil from Tehran after the deadline risk facing Washington sanctions.
Tehran's allies, including Moscow and Ankara, have slammed the Washington decision to end waivers on Iranian oil sanctions, saying it would not serve regional peace and stability.
Spokesperson for EU Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Maja Kocijancic has stated that the European Union regrets the United States' decision to halt waivers on sanctions against importers of Iranian oil, which may undermine the success of the nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
Washington has expressed confidence that its Persian Gulf allies will cover the gap, while market analysts express deep doubt if the United States, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) could make up for a loss of Iran's market share. Some experts say the price will even reach $100 per barrel, adding the US move on Iran's oil does bring a lot more uncertainty in terms of global supplies.
They also believe that the Washington’s move could kill off the OPEC+ deal while dealing a serious blow to the coalition’s ability to coordinate production cuts.
Saudi Arabia could add a few hundred thousand barrels per day above current levels and still keep output below its ceiling as part of the OPEC+ deal, but that may not be enough to compensate for outages in Iran.
The most important matter is if the Saudis are seen as going too far to work with the American government, the rest of OPEC+ may abandon the deal.
Saudi Arabia is currently producing approx. 500,000 barrels per day less than stipulated in the production cut agreement. Riyadh could increase its output by this amount without any problem. But any more rise would violate the agreement and could spark turmoil within OPEC. It would likely fatally wound the OPEC+ deal, if the oil-rich kingdom went beyond its ceiling, so it’s unlikely that they would do this without consulting with OPEC.
"Saudi Arabia is now in a difficult position of having an alliance with Russia to reduce oil supplies and having an alliance with the US to increase supplies," Oliver Jakob, head of PetroMatrix GmbH, told Bloomberg, adding, “You can’t have it both ways for too long.”
The US decision to try and bring down Iran oil exports to zero comes amid supply cuts led by OPEC since the start of the year aimed at propping up prices. As a result, Brent prices have risen by almost 40 percent since January 2019.