China Snubs Geithner on Iran Oil, Japan Plans Cut
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner’s
efforts to tighten economic sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program won
backing from Japan a day after China rejected limiting oil imports from the
country.
Geithner’s meetings were part of a two-stop trip to
Asia’s largest economies aimed at building support for tighter economic
sanctions on Iran after international monitors detected an acceleration in the
nation’s nuclear development program. China, which counts Iran as one of its
top petroleum suppliers, yesterday snubbed the U.S., with a vice foreign
minister saying his nation “opposes imposing pressure and sanctions.”
Crude for February delivery climbed 38 cents, or
0.4 percent, to $101.25 a barrel in electronic
trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
JX Nippon Oil & Energy Corp., Japan’s biggest
refiner, is in talks with Saudi Arabia and other producers to replace crude
shipments in the event of an embargo on Iranian supplies, according to an
official who declined to be identified, citing company policy. JX buys about
90,000 barrels of Iranian oil a day, the official said.
‘Halfway Solution’
“Japan will try and seek a halfway solution where
they’ll try and limit imports from Iran and boost imports from other Middle
Eastern countries that are also U.S. allies,” said Razeen
Sally, a professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of
Public Policy at the National University of Singapore. Given its military
alliance with the U.S., Japan “is much more susceptible to U.S. pressure than
China,” he said.
Japan, the world’s second biggest importer of
Iran’s crude after China, bought 1.09 million kiloliters,
or about 6.85 million barrels, in November, or 6.4 percent
of the country’s total purchases for the month, according to trade ministry
data.
European Union foreign ministers are scheduled to
decide at a Jan. 23 meeting in Brussels when to impose and how to phase in an
embargo on Iranian oil, which is designed to force Iran back to the negotiating
table over its nuclear program.
Uranium Enrichment
Iran has begun enriching uranium to as much as 20 percent U-235 at the underground Fordo site near the city
of Qom, theInternational Atomic Energy Agency said in
a Jan. 9 announcement. The site is monitored by IAEA inspectors to detect any
attempt to enrich uranium to the 90 percent level
necessary for a nuclear bomb.
Iranian Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi said on Dec. 27 that his nation would block oil
shipments through the Strait of Hormuz if sanctions are imposed, the Islamic
Republic News Agency said. The Strait is a transit point for one fifth of oil
traded worldwide.
Refiners in Asia, the destination for 65 percent of Iran’s oil exports, are seeking alternative
sources of crude in the event of a supply disruption from the world’s
fourth-largest producer.
Even as China rebuffed American pressure, Premier
Wen Jiabao is planning a trip to alternative oil providers.
Wen will visit Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates
and Qatar from Jan. 14 to Jan. 19 and attend an international meeting on
energy, the foreign ministry said two days ago.
China’s Stance
“Iran is one of China’s biggest petroleum suppliers,”Vice Foreign Minister Zhai
Jun told reporters in Beijing on 10 January. “China hopes that petroleum
imports won’t be affected as petroleum is needed for China’s development and
for ensuring the needs of its people.”
China stands to be the biggest beneficiary of U.S.
and European plans for sanctions by taking advantage of the mounting pressure
to demand better terms on Iranian crude, analysts said.
“The sanctions against Iran strengthen the Chinese
hand at the negotiating table,” said Michael Wittner,
head of oil-market research for Societe Generale SA in New York.
At the same time, the U.S. is bearing most of the
cost of patrols and surveillance in the Strait of Hormuz, through which 17
million barrels a day of crude are transported. China, the No. 2 importer of
oil after the U.S., enjoys protection for the shipping lanes for free, retired
Admiral Dennis Blair, a former U.S. Director of National Intelligence, said in
an interview.
South Korea Sanctions
South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy,
announced Dec. 16 that it would expand sanctions against Iran and cautioned
companies against importing petrochemicals. Crude oil shipments weren’t
affected. The country added 99 Iranian groups and six individuals to a list of
people and organizations banned from foreign-exchange transactions without
central bank approval.
Iran is South Korea’s fifth-largest supplier of
crude, with a 9.4 percent share in 2011.