This is NOT something the western media would like you to believe. No doubt, however, they are hurting ordinary Iranians
Toothless sanctions? Iranian oil trade booming, China top buyer
An Iranian man works on an oil production platform. (Reuters)
RT,
31
January, 2013
Iran
has quickly found ways to circumvent the EU sanctions imposed on its
oil trade in July. After dipping sharply in summer of 2012, Iranian
crude oil exports rose again by the end of the year.
So
far, Iran’s December crude oil sales were the highest recorded
since the sanctions were first imposed. Iran exported 1.4 million
barrels per day (bpd) in December, compared to less than 900,000 bpd
in September. Pre-sanctions oil exports stood at 2.2 million bpd in
late 2011.
EU
sanctions, introduced in January 2012 and put into effect in July,
aimed to curb Iran's ambitious nuclear program, which Tehran has
insisted is only for peaceful purposes. The Iranian economy is
heavily dependent on oil sales – the cuts in production lead to
billions of dollars in lost revenue and a plunge in the value of the
national currency.
Analysts
believe that sales to Asia and the expansion of Iran’s tanker fleet
helped the Islamic Republic circumvent the sanctions. In countries
like China, India and Japan, Iranian oil constitutes more than 10
percent of the total crude supply – and demand from Asia is only
growing.
"China
is saying let's up the numbers because no-one is doing anything about
it and it looks like Obama has made a political decision not to go to
war with Iran,"
a senior source at a large independent trading house told Reuters.
Iran
is also improving its delivery channels, despite the numerous bans
and restrictions imposed by the international community.
"Iran
bought a number of tankers from China and can now do more deliveries.
It's taken some pressure off Iran and facilitated tanker traffic and
we are seeing higher exports to China,"
analyst Salar Moradi at oil and gas consulting firm FGE told Reuters.
Meanwhile,
a fresh round of US sanctions looms for Iran. Starting on February 6,
US law will prevent the Islamic republic from repatriating earnings
from its oil export trade. The ban is in addition to the
already-existing restrictions, including the country's removal from
the SWIFT global financial service and an indefinite international
asset freeze.
The
new sanctions are expected to reduce export volumes to around 1
million barrels per day, the International Energy Agency predicted.
However, analysts believe that further sanctions will not stop Iran
from selling oil or pursuing its nuclear goals.
"What
we have seen is that when Iran is pushed to a do or die situation,
they have looked for creative solutions to get around sanctions,"
oil and gas analyst Elena McGovern of Business Monitor International
told Reuters. "The
system will always find a way to cope."
The
international community has been failing to engage in constructive
dialogue with Iran on its nuclear program. The so-called ‘sixtet’
of ‘5+1’ states – Britain, China, France, Russia, the US and
Germany – met three times last year with little to no results. The
next round of talks has been stalled until a venue for the meeting is
agreed upon.
"Some
of our partners in the six powers and the Iranian side cannot come to
an agreement about where to meet,behaving
like little children,"
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said. He stressed that Russian
mediators “are
willing to meet at any location.”
While
the West has demanded that Iran abandon its nuclear aspirations, Iran
refuses to back down: Tehran has seized every opportunity to advance
its nuclear capabilities. On Thursday, Iranian officials informed the
UN nuclear agency of its plan to use more modern centrifuges at the
Natanz uranium enrichment plant.
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