So
how long will it be before people actually recognize that the mindset
and consciousness of not only the U.S. government, but of all
governments (except perhaps Iceland) is incapable of producing
results that benefit the people they govern, or anything else for
that matter? -- MCR
Iran
Embargo Impossible to Meet as Ships Need Its Oil
Europe’s
oil embargo on Iran is having unforeseen consequences in the shipping
market, making it almost impossible to determine if vessels are using
fuel that violates the sanctions
4
May, 2012
Supplies
from Iran are a “vital blending component” to make ship fuel,
known as bunkers, according to Barclays Capital. The nation accounted
for about 8 percent of bunkers exported last year to Asia, the
largest market, and about a third of the supply at Fujairah in the
United Arab Emirates, the Middle East’s biggest refueling port,
Barclays estimates.
The
European Union imposed curbs on Iranian oil because of concern the
country’s nuclear program will produce an atomic weapon. The
27-nation bloc is enforcing the ban by extending sanctions to
insurers, voiding the cover of ships carrying Iranian crude cargoes
or using its fuel. The global fleet will spend more than $145 billion
on bunkers this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg using
estimates from JBC Energy GmbH, a Vienna-based research company.
“This
is a problem we didn’t foresee,” Peter Sand, an analyst at the
Baltic and International Maritime Council, which represents 65
percent of ship owners, said by phone from Bagsvaerd, Denmark. “We
don’t know how much Iranian oil is already blended in.”
The
EU agreed to a phased-in ban on buying, transporting, financing and
insuring Iranian oil on Jan. 23, with full implementation July 1.
Ships breaking the sanctions will lose their insurance against risks
including spills and collisions, according to the International Group
of P&I Clubs, whose 13 members cover 90 percent of merchant
vessels. About 90 percent of world trade travels by sea, the Round
Table of International Shipping Associations estimates.
‘Uncertain
Exposure’
“The
sanctions were imposed in quite a hurry, and there are bits that are
impossible to comply with or ensure you are definitely clean,” said
Ben Knowles, a partner at Clyde & Co., a law firm with offices in
16 countries that specializes in international trade. “It’s an
uncertain exposure because the likelihood of being punished for
taking Iranian bunkers is perhaps not that high, but you can’t rule
out a case being made in order to make an example.”
Iran,
the second-biggest member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries, says its nuclear program is for civilian purposes. The
next round of talks between Iran and the five permanent members of
the United Nations Security Council and Germany is scheduled to take
place in Vienna on May 13-14, Iran’s official IRNA news agency
reported April 27.
Crude
Production
Sanctions
already cut Iran’s crude production by 250,000 barrels a day, or
about 7 percent, to 3.3 million a day, and output may fall to 2.6
million by the middle of this year, the International Energy Agency
said April 12. Crude traded on ICE Futures Europe in London rose as
much as 18 percent to $126.22 a barrel this year.
While
crudes from different fields can be identified by their chemical
composition and structure, the origins of bunkers, a residue from oil
refining, are harder to verify, said Andy Wright, a consultant at
FOBAS, a unit of Lloyd’s Register Group that monitors fuel
specifications.
“With
bunkers there isn’t fingerprinting as with crude oil,” he said by
phone from London. “The origin would technically be very difficult
to establish, if not impossible.”
Iran
is now shipping more fuel oil to Singapore, the world’s largest
refueling port, and less to Fujairah, Miswin Mahesh, an analyst at
Barclays in London, wrote in an e-mail.
Global
Supply
Bunkers
rose 4.9 percent this year in Fujairah and reached a 3 1/2 year high
of $758.50 a metric ton on Feb. 27, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Fuel in Singapore advanced 3.8 percent this year after rising to the
highest since July 2008 in February. Iran shipped a monthly average
of 805,000 tons of fuel oil last year, ahead of Saudi Arabia’s
750,000 tons, according to Barclays. Russia accounted for 53 percent
of global supply.
World
Fuel Services Corp. (INT), the largest independent bunker supplier,
has policies and procedures to ensure compliance with sanctions,
Chief Financial Officer Ira Birns said in an e-mailed response to
questions. The Miami-based company doesn’t comment on specific
policies or contractual arrangements, he said.
Companies
should verify their suppliers so that they can demonstrate they
sought to avoid Iranian bunkers should they then be accused of
breaching sanctions, said Sand of BIMCO.
A.P.
Moeller-Maersk (MAERSKB) A/S, the world’s largest shipping company
by market value, avoids Iranian bunkers by vetting suppliers and
monitoring fuel specifications, said Jesper Rosenkrans, a fuel trader
at Maersk Oil Trading, which buys more than 10 million tons of
bunkers a year.
“We’re
doing everything we can to avoid buying something we wouldn’t want
to buy,” Rosenkrans said. “If somebody came to me and said, ‘Can
you guarantee there isn’t another product blended into a bigger
bunker pool,’ then the answer would probably be ‘no’.”
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