Iranian tanker discharges oil into storage in China
ahead of U.S. sanctions
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[October 09, 2018]
By Chen Aizhu and Meng Meng
BEIJING (Reuters) - A vessel carrying 2
million barrels of Iranian oil discharged the crude into a bonded
storage tank at the port of Dalian in northeast China on Monday,
according to Refinitiv Eikon data and a shipping agent with knowledge of
the matter.
Iran, the third-largest producer in the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), is finding fewer takers for its crude ahead
of U.S. sanctions on its oil exports that will go into effect on Nov. 4.
The country previously held oil in storage at Dalian during the last
round of sanctions in 2014 that was later sold to buyers in South Korea
and India.
The very large crude carrier Dune, operated by National Iranian Tanker
Co, offloaded oil into a bonded storage site at the Xingang section of
the port, according to a shipping source based in Dalian, adding this
was the first Iranian oil to discharge into bonded storage in nearly
four years.
The tanker left the Iranian oil port at Kharg Island on Sept. 12,
according to ship-tracking data.
The Xingang area is home to several tank farms including commercial and
strategic reserves. China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) [CNPC.UL] and
Dalian Port PDA Co Ltd <601880.SS> both operate commercial storage in
the area, according to information on their company websites.
An investor relations official at Dalian Port declined to comment.
A manager at the bonded crude storage site operated by Dalian Port
declined to comment whether Iranian oil were moved to the tanks, calling
it the "worst time" to give any comment regarding Iranian crude because
of the U.S. sanctions.
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A person at the CNPC-owned storage site who refused to identify himself when
contacted by Reuters said it is "impossible" that the oil is stored there.
A spokesman for CNPC said he had no information on this matter.
An executive with the China office of National Iranian Oil Co (NIOC) declined to
comment. NIOC also did not respond to an email request seeking comment if it is
storing oil at Dalian.
The shipping source said there is no buyer earmarked for the cargo.
Three other NITC tankers are set to arrive in Dalian in the next week or two,
the ship-tracking data shows. Some of those cargoes are also likely to end up in
bonded storage as the refineries in the region, controlled by CNPC, are not
equipped to process Iranian oil, said three sources at state-run Chinese
refiners.
China's Iranian oil buyers, including state-owned refiner Sinopec <0386.HK> and
state trader Zhuhai Zhenrong Corp, have shifted their cargoes to vessels owned
by NITC since July to keep supplies flowing as the U.S. sanctions have been
re-imposed.
Keeping oil in bonded storage gives the shipment owner the option to sell into
China or to other buyers in the region.
In early 2014, NIOC leased bonded tanks in Dalian and oil from there was shipped
to South Korea and India, Reuters reported. https://reut.rs/2yo9Se6
(GRAPHIC: Track of the NITC tanker Dune - https://reut.rs/2OcNqzB)
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu and Meng Meng; Additional reporting by Beijing
newsroom; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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