Iran's gas condensate exports surpass pre-sanctions level
By Dalga Khatinoglu
Head of Iran News Service of Trend Agency
The latest detailed monthly report of Iranian Customs
Administration, published on Nov.30 says the country's gas
condensate export reached 5,582 thousand tons during the eight
months of Iranian calendar year, which began on March 20.
Based on the last month's report, Iran's total condensate export
stood at 4,433 thousand tons (first seven months), or about 190,000
barrels per day.
Then, according the statistics of 7-month and 8-month periods, Iran
exported about 1,149 thousand tons of condensates during the 8-th
month (October 23 - November 22)- which equals to 345,000 barrels
per day, and indicates approximately 48 percent increase compared
to average condensate exports during first seven months of Iranian
year.
Iran's total condensate export amount for last solar year was 9,630
thousand tons, which indicates 15.36 percent drop compared to the
previous year.
Before Iran had sanctions imposed on it, the country's condensate
export was about 300,000 barrels per day, or 13 percent less that
Iran's 8-th month's figure the current year.
The gas condensate is the best feedstock for producing some
expensive petrochemical production including polymers.
The U.S. hasn't imposed any concrete restrictive sanctions directly
over Iran's condensate exports, but has the option to impose
sanctions on customers only if there is sufficient alternative
supply available.
Then international refineries has decreased condensate import from Iran, fearing for their reputation to be damaged, as well as worrying about sanctions-affected payment, insurance and banking problems.
Iran's condensate consumption is less than 40,000 barrels per day.
The EU imposed sanctions on the Central Bank of Iran (CBI), as
well as banned insurance services for tankers which carry Iranian
oil since mid-2012. The insurance restrictions affected about 95
percent of the global tanker fleet because the ships are covered
under rules governed by the European law.
The U.S also included CBI in the black list, alongside giving
six-month period wavers for Iranian oil customers versus making
"significant decrease" the Iranian crude oil imports every 180
days.
Iran's crude oil export has dropped from 2.2 million barrels per
day- equals to roughly 20 percent of GDP- to about one million
barrels since 2011.
According to the customs Administration last month's report, the
country's gas condensates exports in the first seven months and
eight months of the current year stood at $3.926 billion and $4.944
billion.
So Iran averagely exported $560 million of gas condensates each
month in the seven months period, while the figure reached to
$1.018 billion which is about 45 percent more than the average
amount of the preceding months.
However, Iran's light oil exports for the first eight months
decreased by 21.36 percent in value and 21.45 percent in volume
compared to the same period the last solar year.
The condensate and petrochemical exports share 47.2 percent of the country's total exports in last eight months.
Petrochemicals export
Iranian Customs Administration's latest report has also shown
that the country totally exported $6.405 worth of petrochemicals in
the first eight months of the current year.
According to the last month's report, the country's petrochemical
exports in the first seven months were around $5.592 billion, which
makes a monthly average of $798 million, while the eight month's
figure stood at $813 million.
Iran exported $15 billion worth of petrochemicals in the calendar
year of 1390 (Ended on March 20, 2012), but the figure dropped by
33 percent in the next year reaching only $10 billion.
Iran exported 56.844 million tons of non-oil goods worth $24.605
billion in the first eight months of the current Iranian calendar
year, which is 12.7 percent less than the same period last year,
Iran's Customs Administration reported.
Iran also imported 18.925 million tons of non-oil goods worth
$28.247 billion in the mentioned period. The figure shows 22.7
percent decrease compared to the same period last year.
China with $4.252 billion, Iraq with $3.87 billion, the United Arab
Emirates with $2.318 billion, India with $1.659 billion, and
Afghanistan with $1.639 billion were the main destinations for
Iran's non-oil goods in the mentioned period.
Iron ore, methanol, and tar were the main exported items.
The United Arab Emirates with $5.854 billion, China with $5.539
billion, India with $2.607 billion, South Korea with $2.389
billion, and Turkey with $2.307 billion were also the main
exporters of non-oil goods to Iran in the mentioned period.
Rice ($1.61 billion), press cake ($1.057 billion), wheat ($751
million), corn ($745 million), and motor vehicles with internal
combustion engine ($634 million) were the main imported
items.
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