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News ID: 141069
Publish Date : 02 July 2025 - 21:48

Minister: No Disruptions to Iran’s Oil Exports

TEHRAN – Petroleum Minister Mohsen Paknejad said Wednesday that Iran’s oil exports are continuing unchanged in volume and terms, adding, “at present, we have no concerns in this regard.”
Paknejad made the remarks after a cabinet meeting chaired by President Masoud Pezeshkian, stating, “Oil exports are proceeding as before, with no change in quantity or conditions, and we currently have no worries about this issue.”
Ship-tracker Vortexa, in its latest report said that the world’s top oil importer and biggest buyer of Iranian crude brought in more than 1.8 million barrels per day from June 1-20, a record high based on the firm’s data, Marine Link website reported.
Kpler’s data put the month-to-date average of China’s Iranian oil and condensate imports at 1.46 million bpd as of June 27, up from one million bpd in May.
The rising imports were fuelled in part by an increase in available supplies from floating storage after export loadings from Iran reached a multi-year high of 1.83 million bpd in May, Kpler data showed.
It typically takes at least one month for Iranian oil to reach Chinese ports.
Robust loadings in May and early June mean China’s imports from Iran are poised to remain elevated, Kpler and Vortexa analysts said.
Independent Chinese “teapot” refineries, the main buyers of Iranian oil, also showed strong demand as their stockpiles depleted, said Xu Muyu, Kpler’s senior analyst.
A possible relaxation of U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil could further bolster Chinese buying, she added.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Washington had not given up its maximum pressure campaign on Iran - including restrictions on Iranian oil sales - but signalled a potential easing in enforcement to help the country rebuild.
For this week, Iranian Light crude oil was being traded at around $2 a barrel below ICE Brent for end-July to early-August deliveries, two traders familiar with the matter said, compared to discounts of $3.30-$3.50 a barrel previously for July deliveries.
Narrower discounts were spurred by worries that oil flows could be disrupted through the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway between Iran and Oman, traders said.
Market fears for a closure of the choke-point escalated after last weekend’s U.S. attack on Iranian nuclear sites but eased after Iran and Israel on Tuesday accepted a ceasefire.
Tighter discounts for Iranian oil come amid a retreat in futures prices. ICE Brent crude futures hovered at $68 per barrel on Friday, their level before the Israel-Iran conflict began and down 19% from Monday’s five-month peak.