Iran Stores More Crude Oil Onshore, Tankers
LONDON (Dispatches) -In recent weeks, Iran has been storing more oil onshore and at tankers at sea as it looks to continue producing oil, media have reported .
Last month, the United States put an end to the six-month sanction waivers to all buyers of Iranian oil. A growing number of importers, refiners, insurers, and ship owners prefer to steer clear of dealings with Iranian oil instead of risking secondary sanctions or being cut off the U.S. banking and financial system.
Iran wants to keep pumping crude from its fields because if it stopped extracting oil, resuming production from those fields would require investment.
So the Islamic Republic is storing increasing volumes of its oil on land and at sea.
Iran’s oil storage on land is estimated at 46.1 million barrels out of a total capacity of 73 million barrels, according to data from Kayrros, which tracks oil flows. This estimated volume of oil stored onshore is at its highest level since the middle of January.
At sea, Iran is believed to currently store some 20 million barrels of oil on 16 Iranian tankers, up from 12 tankers with at least 13 million barrels in March, according to data from shipping intelligence platform MarineTraffic, cited by Reuters.
Last month, the United States put an end to the six-month sanction waivers to all buyers of Iranian oil. A growing number of importers, refiners, insurers, and ship owners prefer to steer clear of dealings with Iranian oil instead of risking secondary sanctions or being cut off the U.S. banking and financial system.
Iran wants to keep pumping crude from its fields because if it stopped extracting oil, resuming production from those fields would require investment.
So the Islamic Republic is storing increasing volumes of its oil on land and at sea.
Iran’s oil storage on land is estimated at 46.1 million barrels out of a total capacity of 73 million barrels, according to data from Kayrros, which tracks oil flows. This estimated volume of oil stored onshore is at its highest level since the middle of January.
At sea, Iran is believed to currently store some 20 million barrels of oil on 16 Iranian tankers, up from 12 tankers with at least 13 million barrels in March, according to data from shipping intelligence platform MarineTraffic, cited by Reuters.