rama
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2011
- Messages
- 610
- Reaction score
- 0
Barack Obama signed into effect the Iran Threat Reduction Act on December 31, 2011. That Act bars foreign banks from the US if they conducted transactions with the Central Bank of Iran (CBI), a move intended to choke off Iran's oil incomes, its main source of revenue.
The law calls for US financial sanctions on anyone settling oil trades with CBI, and comes into effect from June 28. The exceptions are White House-blessed waivers or a very tight oil market.
This week, European Union (EU) ambassadors announced their own Iran oil embargo. From July 1, Europe, which takes in about 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) from Iran, will close its market. This decision was taken despite fierce opposition from Greece, which gets a lot of its debt repayment from Iran in oil.
Payment Problems
India's life just got more complicated. India is Iran's third largest oil importer after China. In December 2010, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), fearing US sanctions on India's financial sector, had walked out of the Asian Clearing Union that cleared Iran's oil payments.
This started a merry-go-round as India scoured the world to pay Iran for its oil and simultaneously tried to reduce its dependence on Iranian oil. India began to use one of its small nationalised banks with little or no exposure to the West, to pay for the oil.
The first stop was Germany's EIH Bank, but in a few months that stopped. Turkey's Halkbank has been processing India's payments to Iran since then, though there were palpitations when Halkbank refused a BPCL application. This week, Halkbank stated that it remained open for business for India.
Can India Handle It?
As of now, India's payment options are fairly varied. Some goes through barter, offset against Iranian imports, mainly tea and some jewellery, some in rupee trade (RBI needed a lot of convincing) that may be utilised in building Indian investments in Iran or vice versa; some perhaps, in a currency like yen (though the Japanese may not agree) and a large sum through Turkey until that stops.
According to some diplomatic sources, Iran had asked India for yuan as a trading currency. But that's unacceptable to India. There's also wild talk about Venezuela or even Brazil to route Indian payments. But India is not even going down that path. After an Indian delegation travelled to Iran to discuss oil imports, oil minister Jaipal Reddy said India would buy oil from Iran because the terms were "favourable", euphemism for Iran sweetening oil deals for India.
Non-Iran Suppliers
Meanwhile, India has been reducing oil imports from Iran, ever since Saudi Arabian King Abdullah's January 2006 visit here. Iraq, which is rejoining the global oil market, is also a big oil source. Then there is Nigeria, though internal problems there may impact its capacities soon.
Thus, there is unlikely to be an oil supply problem in the world, despite the IMF hyperventilating about a "supply shock". Between the Saudis, Iraqis, Libyans and Russians there is enough extra oil, close to 1 million bpd more oil may be coming from these producers alone. Besides, the 600,000 bpd that Iran currently sells to the EU will soon be free for countries with the nerve and muscle to ignore sanctions.
Why India's real Iran dilemma isn't oil - The Economic Times
The law calls for US financial sanctions on anyone settling oil trades with CBI, and comes into effect from June 28. The exceptions are White House-blessed waivers or a very tight oil market.
This week, European Union (EU) ambassadors announced their own Iran oil embargo. From July 1, Europe, which takes in about 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) from Iran, will close its market. This decision was taken despite fierce opposition from Greece, which gets a lot of its debt repayment from Iran in oil.
Payment Problems
India's life just got more complicated. India is Iran's third largest oil importer after China. In December 2010, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), fearing US sanctions on India's financial sector, had walked out of the Asian Clearing Union that cleared Iran's oil payments.
This started a merry-go-round as India scoured the world to pay Iran for its oil and simultaneously tried to reduce its dependence on Iranian oil. India began to use one of its small nationalised banks with little or no exposure to the West, to pay for the oil.
The first stop was Germany's EIH Bank, but in a few months that stopped. Turkey's Halkbank has been processing India's payments to Iran since then, though there were palpitations when Halkbank refused a BPCL application. This week, Halkbank stated that it remained open for business for India.
Can India Handle It?
As of now, India's payment options are fairly varied. Some goes through barter, offset against Iranian imports, mainly tea and some jewellery, some in rupee trade (RBI needed a lot of convincing) that may be utilised in building Indian investments in Iran or vice versa; some perhaps, in a currency like yen (though the Japanese may not agree) and a large sum through Turkey until that stops.
According to some diplomatic sources, Iran had asked India for yuan as a trading currency. But that's unacceptable to India. There's also wild talk about Venezuela or even Brazil to route Indian payments. But India is not even going down that path. After an Indian delegation travelled to Iran to discuss oil imports, oil minister Jaipal Reddy said India would buy oil from Iran because the terms were "favourable", euphemism for Iran sweetening oil deals for India.
Non-Iran Suppliers
Meanwhile, India has been reducing oil imports from Iran, ever since Saudi Arabian King Abdullah's January 2006 visit here. Iraq, which is rejoining the global oil market, is also a big oil source. Then there is Nigeria, though internal problems there may impact its capacities soon.
Thus, there is unlikely to be an oil supply problem in the world, despite the IMF hyperventilating about a "supply shock". Between the Saudis, Iraqis, Libyans and Russians there is enough extra oil, close to 1 million bpd more oil may be coming from these producers alone. Besides, the 600,000 bpd that Iran currently sells to the EU will soon be free for countries with the nerve and muscle to ignore sanctions.
Why India's real Iran dilemma isn't oil - The Economic Times