Iran responds to EU oil and gas sanctions with… oil and gas sanctions
Turning
home? An oil tanker is seen off the port of Bandar Abbas, southern
Iran (AFP Photo/Atta Kenare)
RT,
27
January, 2013
Iran
has slapped a ban on oil and gas exports to the European Union, even
though the EU has already forbidden Iranian petrochemicals from
entering its territory.
“Despite
many requests by EU countries on buying oil and gas from Iran, Iran
will not sell any oil and gas to those countries,” Oil
Ministry Spokseman Alireza Nikzad Rahbar told the official Mehr news
agency.
It
is not clear what “requests” Nikzad
Rahbar was referring to, as the EU stopped importing crude oil in
July last year, and gas under the latest round of sanctions that came
into force earlier this month.
It
comes as fresh restrictions are being implemented by the
EU, preventing Iranian banks from dealing with Europe, unless for
humanitarian purposes. The embargoes are aimed at hindering Tehrans
nuclear program, which Brussels believes is aimed at developing a
nuclear weapon.
Iran’s
Central Bank’s assets in the EU have also been frozen and European
shipyards cannot construct oil tankers destined for the Islamic
Republic.
Nikzad
Rahbar said Tehran’s counter-sanctions were a direct response to
these “hostile
decisions”.
The
exact effectiveness and impact of the sanctions on Iran has been
disputed, due to sketchy information coming from Tehran’s
officials.
The
US has estimated that Iran has lost more than $40 billion in revenues
as a result of oil import bans gradually imposed over the past year,
mostly by Western countries.
Earlier
this month, Iranian oil minister Rostam Qasemi also confirmed that
oil exports had fallen by 40 percent, which tallies with the US
estimate.
At
the same time, Nikzad Rahbar insisted to Mehr that the exports hadn’t
been “affected
much” and
that “Iran
has signed new contracts with other world oil companies”.
There
has also been mounting speculation that Iran is circumventing the EU
sanctions by setting up fronts in other countries, particularly
neighboring Turkey, and exporting petrochemicals through third
parties, though the scope of these transactions is unclear.
Officially,
Iran’s GDP contracted by 1 percent last year, while its currency
lost 80 percent of its value against the dollar.
Tehran
insists that its nuclear program is entirely peaceful, while the US
and the EU say Iran is producing ever-greater quantities of enriched
uranium, which is a key component of a functioning nuclear weapon.
Latest
negotiations between the sides have hinged on Iran accepting a new
inspection program from the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA.
After
continually failing to even set a date for possible negotiations, the
sides are now likely to meet for talks next month.
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