The United Emblem, which is carrying more than 1 million barrels
of oil, is one of three tankers loaded with oil from the autonomous
Kurdish region, which is trying to sell oil independently.
Iraqi Kurdistan is locked in a bitter legal and diplomatic struggle
with Baghdad over international oil sales.
A U.S. judge on Tuesday refused a request by Baghdad, citing a lack
of jurisdiction, to seize 1 million barrels of oil aboard the United
Kalavrvta tanker, which has been anchored off the port of Galveston
since the weekend.
The Kurdistan Regional Government filed a letter with the Texas
court arguing its sales are allowed under the Iraqi constitution.
Another tanker carrying Kurdish oil, the United Leadership, has been
anchored off Morocco for almost two months.
All three tankers are managed by Marine Management Services M.C., a
Piraeus-based shipping company.
A senior executive at Marine Management Services confirmed the
ship-to-ship transfer involving the United Emblem took place in a
"legitimate operation".
The ship is "fixed to a legitimate charterer and performing
legitimate operations," said Kostas Georgopoulos, the chartering
manager at Marine Management Services.
"The ship is still in international waters," he added.
Georgopoulos declined to name the charterer or the details of the
oil transfer but was aware the 161,724 dwt (deadweight tonne) ship
was carrying oil from Iraqi Kurdistan.
Around half of the ship's cargo could have been offloaded, according
to Reuters AIS ship tracking data.
Data on July 28 showing the ship was anchored with a 100 percent
draft indicated the tanker was fully loaded. The ship's draft was 74
percent of the maximum when the information was updated on Thursday,
compared with around 60 percent if the tanker was empty.
The ship is anchored in the South China Sea about 20 km off the east
coast of Peninsular Malaysia and about 50 km north-east of
Singapore, Reuters data showed.
[to top of second column] |
Georgopoulos did not know where the ship was headed next, saying the
charterers were controlling the vessel.
"It's not us controlling the tanker. We are expecting the issuing of
orders," Georgopoulos said.
The captain of the ship said when reached by telephone: "You can't
speak to me. Please don't call again. Whatever information you need
get it from my owners. Thank you very much. Bye. Bye."
The London based insurer of the ship, the London P&I Club, declined
to comment specifically on the vessel or its cargo, although
director Steve Roberts, said: "We have had some contact" with Marine
Management Services.
The United Emblem loaded the oil cargo at Ceyhan in Turkey in
mid-June, according to Reuters data, although exports have now
stopped because storage at the port is at capacity forcing the
Kurdistan Regional Government to shut-off its pipeline.
The United States has publicly opposed direct oil sales, fearing
they could contribute to the break-up of Iraq, and instead believes
Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government should reach an
agreement on how the proceeds from oil sales should be split.
(Editing Ed Davies)
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|