BLBG:Iran Sanctions Plan Targets Oil Companies, Tanker Fleet to Slash Business
A U.S. proposal to sanction Iranâs state-owned oil company and its main tanker fleet may ensnare any person or business in the world involved in purchasing or shipping Iranian oil.
Tensions over Iranâs nuclear program have risen sharply in the last week, with U.S. officials such as Defense Secretary Leon Panetta expressing concern about a potential Israeli military attack by mid-year. As a result, pressure is mounting for additional steps against Iranâs economy to force Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to halt his countryâs suspected pursuit of nuclear-weapons capability.
The Senate Banking Committee unanimously adopted a measure Feb. 2 to compel the administration to investigate links between Iranâs crude-oil supply chain and its powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, an elite military unit that the U.S. has sanctioned for weapons proliferation, terrorism support and human-rights abuses.
Proponents say hobbling the oil revenue of Iran, the No. 2 producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, is the best way to forestall military action by Israel or the U.S. Iran says its nuclear program is for civilian energy and medical research only.
While President Barack Obamaâs administration shares the lawmakersâ goals, it is concerned that adding more U.S. sanctions -- before other recent penalties have been implemented -- may make some oil buyers unwilling to comply and strain the coalition against Iran, according to U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the issueâs sensitivity.
âHugeâ Economic Consequences
The economic consequences of blacklisting Iranâs oil âwould be huge,â Ali Alfoneh, an Iran specialist at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington policy group, said in an interview. If other nations comply, âthis is in effect an international oil embargo.â
The Senate measure would give the U.S. Treasury Department 60 days to investigate whether the Revolutionary Guard owns or controls the National Iranian Oil Co., or NIOC, and the National Iranian Tanker Co., or NITC. The provision, along with a House bill filed Jan. 31, would empower the president to penalize foreign institutions by cutting them off from the U.S. banking system if they deal with the two companies. The proposals allow waivers based on oil market conditions or âsignificantâ reductions in Iranian-oil purchases.
A global oil embargo isnât the intent, according to Mark Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, a Washington policy group that has advised Congress and the administration on sanctions.
âDistressed Assetâ
Tainting Iranâs oil by association with the Revolutionary Guard turns it into âa distressed assetâ and increases âthe hassle factorâ in buying it, he said in an interview. Law- abiding buyers will seek other suppliers, while those who flout sanctions will bargain to buy it cheaply, he predicted.
China was the leading importer of Iranian oil in the first six months of last year, followed by Japan, India and South Korea, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Frank Verrastro, director of the Energy and National Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, criticized Congress as âincredibly irresponsibleâ for seeking more sanctions, as the administration already is trying to get other nations to voluntarily reduce Iranian oil purchases while avoiding a price surge.
Tommy Vietor, a White House spokesman, declined to comment on the proposals yesterday.
No. 2 Oil Company
NIOC is owned by the government of Iran and is the worldâs second-largest oil company by volume produced, after the Saudi Arabian Oil Co. NITC, a former subsidiary of NIOC that was privatized 12 years ago, has the worldâs fourth-largest fleet of supertankers, according to London-based Clarkson Research Services Ltd., a unit of the worldâs largest shipbroker.
At the very least, sanctions would make it âvery hard to buy Iranian oil,â and Iranâs tankers âwould not have access to port facilities internationally, because countries would rather deal with the U.S. than with Iran,â Alfoneh said. U.S. companies and individuals are already barred from almost all business with Iran.
In a telephone interview from Tehran yesterday, NITCâs general manager of planning, Abdolsamad Taghol, dismissed any suggestion of military links. NITC operates independently, without administrative, financial or political ties to the Guard, with only civilian personnel, he said.
Iranian Denial
âNITCâs income has never been part of the state budget, and the sole beneficiariesâ of NITCâs revenue are its shareholders, 7 million Iranian retired pension-fund owners, he said. Taghol cited his companyâs partnership with BP Shipping before the 1979 Islamic revolution, and said management includes those trained by BP.
At NIOC, managing director Ahmad Qalebaniâs office referred queries to the public relations office. No spokesman was available after three phone calls yesterday.
The proposed designation of the two companies would add to an array of financial and energy-related penalties imposed by the U.S. and the European Union in the past three months. The EU, collectively the No. 2 importer of Iranian oil in the first half of 2011, last month approved a ban on Iranian oil purchases by the 27-nation bloc set to take effect July 1.
Senator Bob Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, and Representative Howard Berman, a California Democrat, are behind the new proposal. The Senate measure is part of a larger bill targeting Iran-related banking transactions and mining and energy projects, and requiring corporate disclosure of Iran- related activity to the Securities and Exchange Commission.
âBlood Oilâ
Dubowitz praised lawmakers for spotlighting the Revolutionary Guard and casting Iranian crude as âblood oil.â
Oil is Iranâs main source of income, supplying more than 50 percent of the national budget, according to International Monetary Fund figures. Oil earned the Persian Gulf nation $56 billion in the first seven months of 2011, according to the U.S. Energy Department.
In August, Rostam Qasemi, a former Revolutionary Guard commander and former head of Khatam al-Anbiya, its engineering arm, was named Iranâs oil minister and chairman of NIOC. He has been sanctioned by the U.S., the EU and others for his ties to the Guard. Khatam al-Anbiya has been sanctioned by the U.S., the EU and the United Nations.
Seven of eight members of NIOCâs board of directors are executives who serve or used to serve as general managers of NIOC subsidiaries that did business with Khatam al-Anbiya, according to research conducted by the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and Arcanum Global, a private intelligence firm with international headquarters in Zurich.
Not Clear Cut
Three of eight members of NIOCâs general assembly, which sets the companyâs policy and budget, are former Revolutionary Guard members: Qasemi and the ministers of energy and of industries and mining, according to the research.
Dubowitzâs foundation has said it has established âdirect and indirect involvementâ of the Revolutionary Guard in NIOCâs oil deals in Bolivia, India and Malaysia.
Alfoneh, a specialist on the Revolutionary Guard, said he has tracked growing involvement by the Guard in energy, though he has failed to find evidence showing the group controls the oil company or its decision-making. Likewise, while the Guard are involved in Iranâs shipping and ports, Alfoneh said he has no evidence linking the Guard to the tanker company.
âBest-Runâ Company
Kenneth Katzman, a senior Middle East analyst at the non- partisan Congressional Research Service in Washington, said Iran âhas tried to insulateâ both companies from political pressure and patronage, and asserted that âNIOC is widely considered a professional organization -- one of the best-run in Iran.â
Katzman, author of âWarriors of Islam: Iranâs Revolutionary Guard,â said Iran has appointed former Revolutionary Guard members to other ministries, and later replaced them with civilians, never putting the ministries under the Guardâs control.
Itâs like arguing that âsome U.S. firm is coming under U.S. military control because a lot of former military people have high positions there,â he said in an interview.
The U.S. administration, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, has repeatedly accused the Revolutionary Guard of expanding influence in the most lucrative sectors of Iranâs economy.
Ships Reflagged
The U.S. has already sanctioned Iranâs national maritime carrier, the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, for involvement in missile programs and transporting military cargoes. A report last month by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute concluded the carrier had renamed 90 of its 123 ships since 2008 and reflagged some of its fleet in an effort to circumvent sanctions.
âThereâs always going to be some ways aroundâ U.S. sanctions on oil or tankers, said Michael Swangard, an international trade and commodity partner at Clyde & Co., a London-based law firm. âThe rubber only meets the roadâ when countries agree to a united approach, he said.
Iran, the second-largest oil producer in OPEC after Saudi Arabia, pumped about 3.545 million barrels of oil a day last month, a Bloomberg survey showed, and exported an average 2.58 million barrels a day in 2010, according to OPEC statistics.
Crude for March delivery gained $1.48 to settle at $97.84 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange Feb. 3, gaining for the first time in six days.
To contact the reporter on this story: Indira A.R. Lakshmanan in Washington at ilakshmanan@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: John Walcott at jwalcott9@bloomberg.net