Russia’s Lukoil to halt gasoline sales to Iran

Lukoil will cease supplying gasoline to Iran the latest addition to a list of companies that have halted shipments

Lukoil will cease supplying gasoline to Iran the latest addition to a list of companies that have halted shipments

Lukoil, Russia’s number two oil company, has been supplying gasoline to Tehran intermittently, moving between about 250,000 barrels to 500,000 barrels of gasoline every other month, traders said.

“They are not one of the major players in supplying gasoline to Iran, they do it on occasion,” a trader said.

“But now they will stop because of pressure coming from their head office in Moscow.”

Lukoil moved a 250,000 barrel shipment of gasoline to Iran’s Bandar Abbas port between March 10-12, shipbrokers said.

Lukoil declined to comment.

Sources familiar with the company said that the Russian energy giant had received verbal directions from senior management instructing traders involved in gasoline sales to Iran to cease business activity.

Lukoil has significant exposure in the US with about 2,000 retail gasoline stations, the largest presence there among Russian oil firms. ConocoPhillips is a major shareholder in the company.

In March Anglo-Dutch oil firm Shell announced that it had stopped gasoline supplies to the Islamic republic joining two of the world’s largest independent trading companies Glencore and Vitol who had taken similar decisions.

US politicians are working on legislation to penalise fuel suppliers to Iran in an effort to pressure Tehran to stop uranium enrichment.

The West says that the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter is using its atomic programme to develop a nuclear bomb, while Iran insists it is for electricity.

Despite the sanctions Iran has maintained a robust import programme of gasoline from the international market, buying from Malaysia’s state oil firm Petronas, Kuwait’s Independent Petroleum Group and France’s Total.

In March, Iran purchased around 128,000 barrels per day (bpd) of gasoline, steady to imports made the previous month, traders said.

Although Iran has been having no problems sourcing gasoline supply, it has had to pay higher premiums for its purchases since the beginning of April, traders said.

Iran has bought gasoline from the international spot market for April at Middle East naphtha quotes plus $90 to $100 a barrel.

The premiums were about 10-15 percent higher than purchases seen in January and February, traders said.

“They are not having problems for the moment buying gasoline from the international market, the import figures shows no signs of slowing down,” a trader said.

“What could be an issue is if they have to start paying more, because that is a budget issue…and with Iran struggling to sell its crude its pockets must be feeling a little more empty now,” the trader said.

Crude oil exports
Energy-hungry Asian countries are the main buyers of Iranian oil, but recent months have seen a drift in Asia away from crude sourced from the Islamic Republic.

India’s largest private refiner Reliance Industries will not renew a contract to import crude oil from Iran for financial year 2010, two sources familiar with the supply deal said on April 1. Japan’s Iranian crude imports are also seen declining this year, while China, the world’s second largest consumer of oil, cut its crude imports from Iran by nearly 40 percent in the first two months of the year.

Senior Iranian officials have dismissed the effectiveness of sanctions on Tehran, whilst a foreign ministry spokesman described the threat of sanctions as a “joke”.

Iran is the world’s fifth-largest oil exporter but lacks adequate refining capacity to meet domestic demand for motor fuel, forcing it to import up to 40 percent of requirements.

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