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U.S. Punishes Chinese Company Over Iranian Oil

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U.S. Punishes Chinese Company Over Iranian Oil
For the first time, the Trump administration is imposing economic penalties on a Chinese company for importing Iranian oil, a decision certain to add to tensions between Washington and Beijing.


merlin_147516402_98f5c6df-de80-4ce5-a579-3c9fa735e213-articleLarge.jpg

Image
merlin_147516402_98f5c6df-de80-4ce5-a579-3c9fa735e213-articleLarge.jpg

An oil tanker unloading crude oil in Zhoushan, China.CreditCreditChina Stringer Network, via Reuters

By Edward Wong

The Trump administration is imposing economic sanctions on a Chinese state-owned oil trading company and its top executive for buying Iranian oil in violation of an American ban, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Monday.

Mr. Pompeo said in a foreign policy speech at a veterans’ convention in Florida that the company, Zhuhai Zhenrong, and its chief executive, Li Youmin, were “violating U.S. restrictions on Iran’s oil sector.” It is the first time the Trump administration has penalized a Chinese company and executive for defying recent United States sanctions on Iranian oil exports.

The move is certain to increase tensions between Washington and Beijing, which are embroiled in a long-running trade war and a strategic competition that spans the globe.

It is also certain to add to a crisis in the Persian Gulf region, where the United States and Iran are trading low-level hostilities and where Iranian soldiers are boarding or seizing commercial ships.

added the Chinese names announced by Mr. Pompeo to a list of Iran-related designations on Monday.

Oil is the largest revenue source for Iran, and the Trump administration aims to bring those exports to zero as part of a sanctions campaign to force Iran to curb any ambitions it might have for a nuclear weapon and its support of militias in the Middle East.


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After withdrawing last year from a nuclear containment deal that Iran reached with world powers in 2015, Mr. Trump announced major sanctions on Iran. The move was widely criticized by many governments because Iran had been abiding by the nuclear agreement, which offered sanctions relief in return for Iranian compliance.

Despite the new rounds of sanctions, the Trump administration granted waivers in November to allow eight governments to continue buying oil from Iran. Those waivers ended in May, and Mr. Pompeo and other Trump officials said the five nations that actually used the waivers would need to stop all imports of Iranian oil. China is the largest importer of Iranian oil.

Officials in Beijing said they did not agree with the American sanctions and would continue to import oil.



“China consistently opposes U.S. unilateral sanctions,” Geng Shuang, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, said on April 22, when the State Department announced the imminent end of the waivers. “The Chinese government is committed to protecting the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises.”

Zhuhai Zhenrong and Sinopec, another state-owned enterprise, are the two main Chinese companies that import Iranian oil.

Tankers have been unloading millions of barrels of Iranian oil at Chinese ports, where the oil is being kept in what is called “bonded storage,” Bloomberg News reported on Monday, citing people familiar with the actions.

The oil has not passed through Chinese customs or shown up on national import data and may not technically violate the American sanctions because it is still owned by Iran, the report said.

The United States has already gone after a Chinese company in one prominent case related to Iran sanctions.

In December, at the request of the United States, Canadian officials arrested Meng Wanzhou, a top executive of Huawei, the giant Chinese technology company, as she was passing through Vancouver. The Justice Department is seeking her extradition to the United States on charges of lying to Western banks in a scheme that allowed Huawei to secretly violate sanctions on Iran. The Justice Department opened the investigation during the Obama administration.

In mid-June, China received its first delivery of Iranian oil cargo since the Trump administration ended the oil waivers on May 2, the Financial Times reported, citing data from TankerTrackers, which monitors oil shipments through satellite signals and imagery. In that case, the tanker Salina, which can carry up to a million barrels of crude oil, docked at Jianzhou Bay, near the east coast city of Qingdao, on June 20 and unloaded over two days.

Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, has called on the Trump administration to take tougher action to end all Iranian oil exports. After the Financial Times published its report on June 26, Mr. Rubio wrote on Twitter, “The Administration stopped issuing sanctions waivers for Iranian oil exports in May, yet China just received massive oil cargo from Iran.”

@ewong

A version of this article appears in print on July 23, 2019, Section A, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S. Penalty For Chinese Over Oil From Iran. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/22/world/asia/sanctions-china-iran-oil.html
 
Good! It's time that China helped to stop nuclear arms proliferation instead of assisting it.
 
Good! It's time that China helped to stop nuclear arms proliferation instead of assisting it.

I am glad Iran can sell its oil through them to China. America should mind their own business.

The hypocrisy your country represents is shown in so many ways, including expanding nuclear weapons types while condemning others.
 
Good! It's time that China helped to stop nuclear arms proliferation instead of assisting it.
yeh how about sending un nuclear guys to israel first? we have to start somehwere right
 
U.S. Punishes Chinese Company Over Iranian Oil
For the first time, the Trump administration is imposing economic penalties on a Chinese company for importing Iranian oil, a decision certain to add to tensions between Washington and Beijing.


merlin_147516402_98f5c6df-de80-4ce5-a579-3c9fa735e213-articleLarge.jpg

Image
merlin_147516402_98f5c6df-de80-4ce5-a579-3c9fa735e213-articleLarge.jpg

An oil tanker unloading crude oil in Zhoushan, China.CreditCreditChina Stringer Network, via Reuters

By Edward Wong

The Trump administration is imposing economic sanctions on a Chinese state-owned oil trading company and its top executive for buying Iranian oil in violation of an American ban, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Monday.

Mr. Pompeo said in a foreign policy speech at a veterans’ convention in Florida that the company, Zhuhai Zhenrong, and its chief executive, Li Youmin, were “violating U.S. restrictions on Iran’s oil sector.” It is the first time the Trump administration has penalized a Chinese company and executive for defying recent United States sanctions on Iranian oil exports.

The move is certain to increase tensions between Washington and Beijing, which are embroiled in a long-running trade war and a strategic competition that spans the globe.

It is also certain to add to a crisis in the Persian Gulf region, where the United States and Iran are trading low-level hostilities and where Iranian soldiers are boarding or seizing commercial ships.

added the Chinese names announced by Mr. Pompeo to a list of Iran-related designations on Monday.

Oil is the largest revenue source for Iran, and the Trump administration aims to bring those exports to zero as part of a sanctions campaign to force Iran to curb any ambitions it might have for a nuclear weapon and its support of militias in the Middle East.


  • Unlock more free articles.
Create an account or log in


After withdrawing last year from a nuclear containment deal that Iran reached with world powers in 2015, Mr. Trump announced major sanctions on Iran. The move was widely criticized by many governments because Iran had been abiding by the nuclear agreement, which offered sanctions relief in return for Iranian compliance.

Despite the new rounds of sanctions, the Trump administration granted waivers in November to allow eight governments to continue buying oil from Iran. Those waivers ended in May, and Mr. Pompeo and other Trump officials said the five nations that actually used the waivers would need to stop all imports of Iranian oil. China is the largest importer of Iranian oil.

Officials in Beijing said they did not agree with the American sanctions and would continue to import oil.



“China consistently opposes U.S. unilateral sanctions,” Geng Shuang, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, said on April 22, when the State Department announced the imminent end of the waivers. “The Chinese government is committed to protecting the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises.”

Zhuhai Zhenrong and Sinopec, another state-owned enterprise, are the two main Chinese companies that import Iranian oil.

Tankers have been unloading millions of barrels of Iranian oil at Chinese ports, where the oil is being kept in what is called “bonded storage,” Bloomberg News reported on Monday, citing people familiar with the actions.

The oil has not passed through Chinese customs or shown up on national import data and may not technically violate the American sanctions because it is still owned by Iran, the report said.

The United States has already gone after a Chinese company in one prominent case related to Iran sanctions.

In December, at the request of the United States, Canadian officials arrested Meng Wanzhou, a top executive of Huawei, the giant Chinese technology company, as she was passing through Vancouver. The Justice Department is seeking her extradition to the United States on charges of lying to Western banks in a scheme that allowed Huawei to secretly violate sanctions on Iran. The Justice Department opened the investigation during the Obama administration.

In mid-June, China received its first delivery of Iranian oil cargo since the Trump administration ended the oil waivers on May 2, the Financial Times reported, citing data from TankerTrackers, which monitors oil shipments through satellite signals and imagery. In that case, the tanker Salina, which can carry up to a million barrels of crude oil, docked at Jianzhou Bay, near the east coast city of Qingdao, on June 20 and unloaded over two days.

Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, has called on the Trump administration to take tougher action to end all Iranian oil exports. After the Financial Times published its report on June 26, Mr. Rubio wrote on Twitter, “The Administration stopped issuing sanctions waivers for Iranian oil exports in May, yet China just received massive oil cargo from Iran.”

@ewong

A version of this article appears in print on July 23, 2019, Section A, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S. Penalty For Chinese Over Oil From Iran. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/22/world/asia/sanctions-china-iran-oil.html

I remember there was a thread on this forum accusing China of stopping importing oil from Iran.
 
Only China can do it while other countries can't afford wrecking the relationship even further. Turkey and India certainly are not in a position to anger the US further after their S-400 purchase. China just keeps on importing no matter what the consequences might be. Other than China and Russia i don't see any country who can truly have independent policies.
 
Chinese crude shipments from Iran were 855,638 tons last month, or 208,205 barrels per day (bpd), customs data showed. Imports continued despite Washington’s ending of exemptions given to Beijing for buying Iran’s crude in May.

The imports were, however, almost 60 percent down from a year earlier.
A total of 670,000 tons (about 163,000 bpd) of Iranian crude oil was discharged in June at Tianjin in north China and Jinzhou in the northeast, according to assessments by Refinitiv Oil Research. Another 430,000 tons of Iranian crude oil was discharged in July at Jinzhou and Huizhou in South China.

Last week, Washington blacklisted Chinese company Zhuhai Zhenrong which is the largest buyer of Iranian oil in the world. The company’s CEO Youmin Li was also placed on the US blacklist.

Exports of Iranian crude oil have been put in jeopardy since the White House re-imposed sanctions on Iran in November last year, demanding all countries stop importing oil from the country.

Tehran said it will defy the sanctions and continue to export oil. In April, Washington said it will end Iran sanction waivers which have been granted to China, India, Greece, Italy, Taiwan, Japan, Turkey, and South Korea to ensure low oil prices and avoid disruption to the global oil market. The decision to end waivers “is intended to bring Iran’s oil exports to zero,” Washington said, warning that countries which continue to buy Iranian crude after the May 2 deadline will risk facing US sanctions.

Tehran has already admitted that tighter US restrictions had affected exports although the country’s authorities insist they will continue to sell crude through unconventional methods.

China has criticized Washington’s use of sanctions against other states, designating them as a form of “bullying.” Beijing said it would keep its trade and energy ties with Tehran despite the fact that several major Chinese companies have been affected by US sanctions over their role in energy imports from Iran.

https://www.rt.com/business/465303-china-iran-oil-us/
 
whatever
 
Zhuhai Zhenrong will not be affected by US sanctions.
 
US cannot punish a Chinese company that do not use USD in oil trade, more so when that company is set up specifically to deal with only Iranian oil and nothing else.

It will be better if the Chinese company (i.e. registered in China) employs Iranian CEO, and top management filled by all Iranian managers, also by Iranian shareholders. LOL!!! What can US do about this?
 
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