28 Dec 2024
Wednesday 26 June 2019 - 17:55
Story Code : 352747

Iran delivers 1st Chinese oil purchase since May: report


MNA According to a report, National Iranian Tanker Company (NITC) delivered oil to the Jinxi Refining and Chemical Complex in China, marking the first confirmed delivery of Iranian crude purchased after the Trump administrations revocation of waivers permitting the sale of Iranian oil on May 2.







According to bourseandbazaar.com, the medium-sized Suezmax vessel, named SALINA, departed from Irans Kharg Island terminal on May 24. SALINA loaded approximately one million barrels of Iranian oil before departing on May 28.

A few weeks later, on June 20, the vessel arrived at the Jinxi Refinery, located near the Port of Jinzhou, near Beijing. Notably, Jinxi is owned and operated by PetroChina, which is affiliated to China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), a long-time buyer of Iranian oil and the parent company of Bank of Kunlun, the financial institution that has been at the heart of China-Iran trade for the last decade.

Iran has been delivering significant volumes of crude oil into bonded storage in China over the last year, selling that oil to China in subsequent months. CNPCs nearby storage facilitypart of Chinas Strategic Petroleum Reservecan hold 19 million barrels. But in the absence of waivers, the storage of Iranian oil would still contravene US sanctions, making it likely that the delivered oil was taken by CNPC as a purchase.

SALINAs journey serves to confirm earlier reports that China had resumed purchasing Iranian petroleum products, including crude oil and liquid petroleum gas, despite the fact that such purchases would run afoul of US sanctions. Several other tankers are expected to arrive in China in the coming weeks.

The central role of state-owned CNPC, Chinas second largest energy conglomerate, suggests that China has resumed purchases of Iranian oil as a matter of government policy. During a visit to Beijing in May, Iranian foreign minister Javad Zarif was reassured by his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, that China would continue to support Iran, so long as Iran remained in compliance with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear deal.


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