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Page added on February 7, 2014

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Japan makes first oil payment to Iran in a year

Japan makes first oil payment to Iran in a year thumbnail

Japan this week became the first of Iran’s oil buyers to make a payment for crude imports under an interim nuclear deal, sources told Reuters on Wednesday, as the West eased a year-long stranglehold on revenues that has crippled the Iranian economy.

Tough international sanctions over the past two years have cut Iran’s oil exports in half. U.S. measures imposed a year ago stopped the remaining importers of Iranian oil from transferring cash to Tehran, starving the OPEC member of its principal source of hard currency and forcing Iran to the negotiating table over its disputed nuclear program.

Tokyo’s role in sending the first funds may be a boon for Japanese firms jostling for position with international rivals to invest in Iran’s oil and gas sector, should a further agreement end Tehran’s international isolation.

It is unclear why Japan was the first of Iran’s oil buyers to pay. China, India and South Korea also buy crude from Iran and all have billions of dollars of cash held in Iranian accounts pending transfer.

The Iranian funds were released earlier this week from an account held by the Bank of Japan, three sources told Reuters speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. One of the sources confirmed the amount was for $550 million, while another said it was likely further releases of Iranian funds would be made by Japan as they come due.

A substantial portion of frozen Iranian funds are held at the Bank of Japan, one of the sources said.

The funds were transferred to an Iranian Central Bank account in Switzerland, a U.S. Treasury spokeswoman said earlier this week.

Under a November 24 agreement with six major powers, Tehran gets limited sanctions relief in exchange for steps to curb its nuclear program.

The interim agreement gives Iran access to $4.2 billion of its oil revenues frozen abroad if it carries out its part of the deal, while parties continue negotiations for a final agreement within a year. The next round of talks starts on February 18.

The West suspects Iran was using the nuclear program to develop nuclear weapons. Iran says the program was to generate electricity and for medical isotopes.

Some payments under the six-month deal, which officially began on January 20, depend on Iran fulfilling its commitment to dilute half of its 20 percent enriched uranium to no more than 5 percent enriched uranium.

SANCTIONS PAIN

Until the interim deal, Iran’s importers had been steadily reducing purchases to avoid falling foul of U.S. and European Union sanctions.

The four Asian buyers together cut oil imports from Iran by 15 percent on the year to an average of 935,862 barrels per day (bpd) in 2013, government and industry data showed.

The decades-long U.S. campaign to isolate Iran has choked foreign investment and barred access to the latest technology to exploit the country’s vast oil and gas reserves.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said last month that Iran was seeking a comprehensive agreement so it can develop its battered economy, inviting Western companies to seize opportunities now and promising oil executives a new, attractive investment model for oil contracts by September.

Oil and other companies from France and Russia have already responded.

Iran welcomed a senior French trade delegation to the country on Monday, telling more than 100 executives that the far-sighted among them stood to win the race for business following an easing of some economic sanctions.

A source close to the delegation told Reuters it was the most senior group of executives and financiers to visit Iran since the 1979 revolution.

Japanese banks and other companies have been cautious about approaching Iran because of the fear of running afoul of U.S. sanctions if the current opening falters, bankers and officials said.

Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group paid a $9 million fine in 2012 to U.S. regulators to settle charges that it had violated U.S. sanctions with payments to Iran that dated back to 2007.

It will take some time before investment materializes and oil flows return to their pre-sanction levels.

Iran cannot get its next installment of $450 million on March 1 unless the International Atomic Energy Agency confirms Tehran has done half the necessary dilution of its enriched uranium, according to a Treasury fact sheet.

The following is a table outlining the payments totaling $4.2 billion and their conditions to Iran following the November agreement between Tehran and the five powers.

Feb 1 $550 million Paid, transferred from Bank of Japan

Mar 1 $450 million Contingent on confirmation of dilution of half of Iran’s stockpile of near-20% enriched uranium it is required to dilute

Mar 7 $550 million

Apr 10 $550 million

Apr 15 $450 million Contingent on confirmation dilution of the rest of Iran’s stockpile of near-20% enriched uranium it is required to dilute

May 14 $550 million

Jun 17 $550 million

Jul 20 $550 million Contingent on confirmation Iran has fulfilled all of its commitments

reuters



7 Comments on "Japan makes first oil payment to Iran in a year"

  1. DC on Fri, 7th Feb 2014 11:37 pm 

    Good for them, buying oil from Iran is NOT a crime.

  2. Davy, Hermann, MO on Sat, 8th Feb 2014 2:01 am 

    I am sticking to my desire to mitigate a hard landing in a collapsed global system. Iranian oil will buy the world time. We all know the financial system is teetering and will collapse eventually. All Ponzi schemes do by their very nature. We must avoid at all cost another energy shock. Our financial system cannot deal with the deflating bubble of debt and an energy shock. We need some time to prepare and adjust. I believe this preparation and adjustment has a chance when our populations are in a crisis mode. This crisis mode has started and will become more intense in the next two years. We must look past the crimes and towards survival. Judgment for the criminals will occur eventually. Those highest up the house of cards will fall the farthest.

  3. Makati1 on Sat, 8th Feb 2014 4:00 am 

    Iran has already been paid for much of their oil in trade through 3rd parties, Sometimes in goods, sometimes in weapons, sometimes in gold. That the US is being ignored for the most part, during that time, proves it is about done as a super power and global bully. It is the worlds biggest debtor and will bring down the world economy if it is not displaced soon. The rest of the world outside the West knows that.

  4. Davy, Hermann, MO on Sat, 8th Feb 2014 1:56 pm 

    Sure thing Makati, sounds so clear and simple. Iranian government is the greatest thing since sliced bread too. I think their policies will save the earth. I know the Chinese are the same and your country will be so much better when they move in and take over. I heard they have already infiltrate most of your society and are in effect controlling the strings of the puppet

  5. Makati1 on Sat, 8th Feb 2014 3:55 pm 

    Which society Davy? The Corrupt US one or the corrupt Philippine one? How about the corrupt EU or the corrupt Japanese? Is there a country that is NOT corrupt these days? I doubt it.

    Actually, there will be a huge world war before the Chinese get to take over anything. What is left will not be worth taking over as it will be a nuclear war and what resources survive will not allow anything but minimal survival for those who live through it. There is no ‘safe’ place on earth anymore.

    I do prefer living in a country without any nuclear plants to blow up, like the US with it’s 100+ antiques and their thousands of tons of spent fuel in glorified swimming pools.

  6. Davy, Hermann, MO on Sat, 8th Feb 2014 4:09 pm 

    Good point Makati but just a matter of time before the shit drifts down to your southern latitude….radiation knows no boarders

  7. Northwest Resident on Sat, 8th Feb 2014 8:58 pm 

    If Beelzebub himself were selling oil, the nations of planet Earth would line up to buy it, no questions asked.

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