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Paper Says Iran Lost $450 Billion In Oil Exports Over A Decade

Dalga Khatinoglu
Dalga Khatinoglu

Oil, gas and Iran economic analyst

Nov 18, 2022, 20:28 GMT+0Updated: 17:39 GMT+1
Tanker loading Iranian oil in the Persian Gulf on March 22, 2022
Tanker loading Iranian oil in the Persian Gulf on March 22, 2022

Iran has lost $450 billion in oil revenues in a decade because of international and US sanctions, causing a serious economic crisis, a newspaper in Tehran says.

Aftab News website based its calculation of lost revenues on OPEC’s annual oil export numbers and estimated that UN Security Council sanctions that came into play a decade ago and lasted more than 3 years, followed by US sanctions since 2018 cost Iran dearly.

In absence of sanctions, Iran was exporting anywhere between 2.2-2.5 million barrels of crude oil per day, which depending on global prices could generate annual revenues of up to $100 billion. But when sanctions were imposed these exports dwindled to as little as 200,000 barrels per day, as was the case in 2019. Currently, by circumventing existing US sanctions Tehran is believed to be selling up to one million barrels mostly to China.

Around 2010, Iran was generating revenues close to $100 billion while in 2021, OPEC estimated oil export income of just $25 billion, with an average shipment of 763,000 barrels per day. If exports had continued at the 2.5-million-barrel daily rate last year, Iran would have earned $82 billion.

Although our estimate of Iran’s losses in the past decade are much lower than what Aftab news has calculated, it is still considerable. Based on the same OPEC data and other indicators, we estimate that Iran lost around $300 billion, although a substantial part of the sales during sanctions remains hidden from view, especially in terms of actual earnings.

Iran’s losses have a disproportionate impact since the country has not been able to free itself from an oil-export-based economy. About half the government budget depends on oil revenues and a $30 billion annual shortfall is devastating for the largely state-owned and controlled economic system.

That is why the annual inflation rate has stood at more than 40 percent in the past two years as the government has resorted to printing huge amounts of money to pay for its obligations.

The government decided in its November 2 cabinet meeting to allow individuals and companies to sell crude in contravention of US sanctions, according to rules and conditions kept confidential.

This might marginally increase export revenues but first it will enrich government and military leaders who will tightly control who is allowed to act as middleman.

The scheme is not new. During international nuclear sanctions in early 2010s the same method was used with the result that two big embezzlement cases emerged, one in oil exports and the other in petrochemicals.

In one clandestine oil export scheme, a trader named Babak Zanjani, with close ties to government leaders, pocketed at least $2.7 billion and has been in jail for years awaiting execution that has not been carried out so far. Some speculate that either he has still not given back the money or knows too much to be hanged. A third possibility is that he owes percentages to powerful officials, and they still hope to get their money back.

Lately, the Biden Administration appears to be more resolute in enforcing US sanctions, with designating individuals and third-party companies that are involved in one way or another in doing business with sanctioned Iranian entities.

Just on Thursday, the US Treasury Department sanctioned 13 businesses in the United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong that it said were involved in Iran’s petrochemical exports.

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Pentagon Says Skeptical Of Iran’s Claim On Hypersonic Missile

Nov 18, 2022, 15:24 GMT+0

Washington says it is doubtful about announcements by Iranian officials that the Islamic Republic is developing a hypersonic missile.

Department of Defense's spokeswoman Sabrina Singh said on Thursday that the US questions the accounts claiming that the Islamic Republic developed a hypersonic missile.

“We've seen the reports asserted and coming out of Iran, we remain skeptical of these reports,” the Pentagon spokeswoman told a news conference.

Commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Aerospace Force, Amir Ali Hajizadeh claimed last week that the regime had built its first missile that can fly at least five times faster than the speed of sound.

“This missile has a high speed and can maneuver in and out of the atmosphere. It will target the enemy’s advanced anti-missile systems and is a big generational leap in the field of missiles,” Tasnim News Agency quoted Hajizadeh as saying.

“We will continue to monitor closely any development or proliferation out of Iran or missile systems,” added Sabrina Sing in reaction to the reports.

IRGC officials and state media have not published any details about their claim and have promised that this missile will be unveiled soon.

Tehran’s claim regarding this weapon comes at a time that tensions between the Islamic Republic and the West over the violent suppression of antigovernment protests, Iran’s nuclear case and its drone supplies to Russia are mounting.

Hypersonic missiles are harder to intercept as they only need a low trajectory in the atmosphere.

Britain Says Drone Circles Vessel In Gulf Of Oman After Strike On Tanker

Nov 18, 2022, 11:56 GMT+0

Britain's maritime agency said a drone circled a ship in the Gulf of Oman on Friday, three days after an Iranian-made drone attacked a tanker in the region.

The Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO), which is part of the Royal Navy, said the incident took place about 50 miles southwest of Muscat. The vessel and crew were reported to be safe. It did not specify what kind of vessel was involved.

The US Central Command said on Wednesday that an Iranian-made drone had attacked the tanker Pacific Zircon on Tuesday.

"This unmanned aerial vehicle attack against a civilian vessel in this critical maritime strait demonstrates, once again, the destabilizing nature of Iranian malign activity in the region," the Central Command statement said.

An Israeli official said Iran was responsible for the strike, while Iran's Nournews, which is affiliated to Tehran's security organization, blamed Israel and said the "Hebrew-Arab axis" aimed to create a "charged atmosphere" ahead the soccer World Cup that starts in Qatar on Sunday.

Pacific Zircon sustained minor damage with no injuries or spillage of the gas oil cargo, its operator, Israeli-controlled Eastern Pacific Shipping, said on Wednesday.

Attacks on tankers in Gulf waters in recent years have come at times of heightened regional tensions.

Reuters Report

Venezuela Says It Has ‘Great Friends’, Including Iran And Russia

Nov 18, 2022, 11:40 GMT+0

While the international community is restricting ties with the Islamic Republic over violence against protesters, Venezuela says it counts on Iran as an ally to bolster its independence.

"We have great friends in the world with a great scientific and technological capacity, the Islamic Republic of Iran, the People’s Republic of China, the Russian Federation, our brothers in India, Belarus," said the Venezuelan president during a speech on state TV Wednesday.

The ninth meeting of the Iran-Venezuela Joint Economic Committee was held in Tehran Tuesday during which Tehran and Caracas agreed for the expansion of ties in several fields.

Both countries are under American sanctions and try to sell their oil by illicit shipments mostly to China.

In June of 2022, Caracas and Tehran signed a 20-year cooperation plan which involves Iranian assistance in repair and maintenance of existing Venezuelan refineries, as well as other technical and engineering expertise.

While Venezuela enjoys what are believed to be the world’s largest petroleum deposits, years of mismanagement, corruption and maintenance issues have dramatically hampered its production and refining capabilities.

As the Iranian public persists with weeks of angry protests against the country's clerical regime, earlier reports from Tehran’s airport suggested some senior officials may have begun sending family members to friendly countries, including Venezuela.

Given Tehran’s relative lack of friends and allies around the world options for Iranian officials to travel to other countries are quite limited.

Iran Vows To Export Medicines To Hungary Amid Serious Shortages

Nov 18, 2022, 08:48 GMT+0

As Iran faces a serious shortage in medicines with some prices rising sevenfold, the Islamic Republic says it is ready to export medicines to Hungary.

Economy Minister Ehsan Khandouzi, who visited Budapest, said Thursday that Tehran is open to joint investment in pharmaceuticals as prices of Iranian products are “lower than foreign competitors.”

The visit and talk of economic cooperation come as Hungary is a member of Nato and EU while Iran is being harshly criticized by the European Union for using intense violence against protesters and supplying drones to Russia to attack Ukraine.

The minister’s claim comes as much of the raw materials needed for producing medicines in Iran is imported. The Islamic Republic is also dependent on imports for most of the drugs needed to treat life-threatening ailments such as cancer and coronary disease.

Most medicines in Iran are produced locally by quasi-governmental companies. When the Iranian currency began to nosedive in early 2018, the government offered a fixed exchange rate for essential goods, mainly food and medicines.

However, earlier this year, the new administration of President Ebrahim Raisi eliminated what was in fact a government subsidy. Now, food and medicine producers must buy dollars at rates seven times higher to import their raw materials, which has disrupted domestic production.

Reports from Iran say that people cannot even find painkillers, IV fluids, and antibiotics at pharmacies.

Internet Access Smoother In Iran After EU Sanctions

Nov 17, 2022, 17:49 GMT+0

Social media users in Iran say following the designation of Abr Arvan company by the European Union many websites are not disrupted anymore and can be accessed easily.

According to digital activists, after the EU sanctioned Abrarvan, the company lost the servers it was using in Europe and is unable to censor Iran's internet anymore.

Arvan Cloud or Abr Arvan is an Iranian IT company supporting the Iranian government’s efforts to control access to the Intranet in Iran.

The European Union sanctioned the company on November 14 for its role in disrupting the internet to pave the ground for the regime to crack down on protests following the death of Mahsa Amini.

The EU says since 2020, Abr Arvan has been a major partner in the project of the Iranian government, in general, and the Iranian Ministry of Information and Communications Technology, in particular, to set up a separate, Iranian version of the internet.

“Such a national intranet with connecting points to the global internet will help to control the flow of information between the Iranian intranet and the global internet,” said the EU.

According to the EU, Abr Arvan is involved in censorship and efforts of the Iranian government to shut down the internet in response to recent protests in Iran.

“It is also associated with persons responsible for serious human rights violations in Iran, notably the EU-listed Iranian Minister of Information and Communications Technology.”