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Report: S. Korean refiner lifts Iranian crude embargo

Seoul's biggest refiner SK Energy said to receive cargo from Tehran despite international oil embargo; second shipment said to be underway

South Korean refiner Hyundai Oilbank has loaded a cargo of crude in Iran for delivery later this month, a company source said on Friday, while a cargo for refiner SK Energy arrived this week as Seoul resumes imports following a two-month gap.

 

The north Asian country has restarted Iranian oil imports of about six million barrels per month, or 200,000 barrels per day of full contracted volumes, after a way was found to get around a European Union ban on insurance cover.

 

The cargoes are being transported under Iranian insurance cover to avoid sanctions, refining and government sources said.

 

"Hyundai Oilbank lifted its first Iranian crude last week and it is expected to arrive later this month," said a company source, who declined to be identified.

 

Among South Korea's four refiners, only SK Energy and Hyundai Oilbank import Iranian crude.

 

A spokesman at SK Energy's parent firm, SK Innovation, said its first Iranian cargo for this month arrived at the port of Ulsan on Tuesday.

 

He declined to comment on the fate of its second cargo, but a government source has said it has already been loaded and should arrive later this month.

 

All three cargoes – of two million barrels each – should be able to clear customs this month based upon arrival dates.

 

The resumption of imports is unlikely to hinder South Korea's bid to extend a US sanction waiver in December as this year's imports are still down sharply from a year ago.

 

South Korea's imports from Iran during the first eight months were 38.77 million barrels, or about 159,000 bpd, down nearly a third from a year ago, according to data from state-run Korea National Oil Corp.

 

The world's fifth-largest crude importer, however, is set to remain under pressure to cut Iranian crude imports.

 

"The United States wants to see us import no Iranian crude ultimately," said a government source.

 

Tehran offered to provide up to $1 billion of insurance cover to Iranian vessels shipping oil to South Korea as Iran seeks to keep its crude flowing to its top four customers: South Korea, China, India and Japan.

 

The four countries, which buy more than half of Iran's oil exports, have slashed purchases this year under pressure from EU and US sanctions aimed at squeezing Tehran's oil income to curb its nuclear program suspected of developing weapons.

 

 

 


פרסום ראשון: 10.05.12, 09:17
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