'They are going to deliver this oil to Syria': How an Iranian supertanker is flouting Trump's sanctions - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 06:43 AM | Calgary | -0.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

'They are going to deliver this oil to Syria': How an Iranian supertanker is flouting Trump's sanctions

The Grace I supertanker left Iran filled with 2.1 million barrels of crude in the spring. In July, it showed up at the mouth of the Mediterranean Sea and has been at the centre of a diplomatic tempest as it tries to off-load its cargo.

Since leaving Iran with 2.1 million barrels, rogue tanker has changed its name, route in bid to evade scrutiny

The Grace I left Iran filled with barrels of oil in the spring. Six weeks ago, it showed up at the mouth of the Mediterranean and has been at the centre of a diplomatic tempest ever since. (Marcelo del Pozo/Bloomberg)

Last spring, the Grace I left a filling station in the middle of the Persian Gulf loaded down with 2.1 million barrels of Iranian crude. Too large for the Suez Canal, the oil tankermade the long journey around the coast of Africa before showing up at the mouth of the Mediterranean Sea last month.

British authorities in Gibraltar impounded the ship and its cargo on suspicion it planned to deliver the oil it was carrying to Syria, which would violate EU sanctions against the country. Iran quickly retaliated and seized a British tanker in the Persian Gulfon a trumped-up charge.

After six weeks in maritime purgatory, the Grace was eventually allowed to depart, on the assurance that it was not headed for Syria. But some experts are convinced that's not true.

Giorgos Beleris, oil research manager at data firm Refinitiv, says only three countries at the moment are willing to accept Iranian oil: Turkey, Syria and China."It was bound to head to one of them,"he said in an interview.

After Grace I was impounded by British authorities in Gibraltar, the Iranians seized a British tanker, the Stena Impero, shown here being surrounded by Iranian warships in the Persian Gulf in July. (The Associated Press)

U.S. authorities soughtthe seizure of the vessel while it was still under Gibraltar's control, but the ship left before the Americans could step in and intercept it.

On Aug.18, the tanker changed its name from the Grace I to the Adrian Darya-I and changed its flag from that of Panama'sto Iran's. It set a courseeastwards away from Gibraltar, claimingits destination was Kalamata, Greece, a place where the type of oil it's used to off-loading comes from olives, not crude.

Grace I changed its name to the Adrian Darya-1 shortly after being released from British custody in the waters off Gibraltar. In this photo, a crewman is seen taking a picture of the vessel's new signage. The old name can be seen painted over underneath. (Jon Nazca/Reuters)

If the name change weren't enoughthe Greektrajectory raised a few more eyebrowsbecause full to the gills, the way it is the Adrian Daryais too deep and large to come into a berth in Kalamata. Even if the shipcould manage it,the port doesn't even have any crude-processing facilities to off-load it with.

But the ship kept upthat charadefor a few days, heading east toward Sicily. Then on Aug.23, it updated its destination to the port of Mersin, a Turkish port that's less than 200kilometres from the Syrian border. Mersin'sproximity to a refinery in Baniyas, Syria, made international tensions ratchet up that much more.

The ship continuesto befuddle maritime observers by being cagey about its true intentions. Andinternational attention on the rogue supertanker has hit an uncharacteristic fever pitchin the normally staid world of globalshipping.

The United Stateshas put sanctions on Iranian crudewhile the European Unionhassanctions on Syria. So trying to sneak $130 million US worth of oilbetween the two countries would be one of the most treacherous routes to complete in the world at the moment.But the Adrian Darya's behaviour suggests the ship is hell-bent on trying.

"For sure, they are going to deliver thisoil to Syria," author and defence analyst Babak Taghvaee says. Ostracized by the international community, Syria needs crude oil to keep itsrepressive regime in power, and the only country willing to make any effort to help that happen is Russia.

So listing adestination in Turkeyis no accident, because Turkish and Syrian waters are within the sphere of influence of the Russian navy via their naval base inTartus on the Syrian coast.

"They just want to be close enough toSyria to gain some protection from Russian navy ships, which are in Tartus or sailing in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea," Taghvaee says.

The ship faces another conundrum in that because it is fully loaded with oil, it sits too low in the water to get through the Suez Canal. If it can't find a willing buyer, doublingback to the Atlantic would be too treacherous given the scrutiny around Gibraltar. But at 22-metres deep, it can't go through the 21-metre deep Suez until it lightens its load. So it is effectively trapped in the Mediterranean until something changes.

U.S. authorities are convinced the Adrian Darya is trying to violate sanctions on shipping oil out of Iran and into Syria. (Marcelo del Pozo/Bloomberg)

There are 2choices

Many experts suspect the ship's plan is to meet up with an empty Iranian tanker and off-load enough of its cargo at sea in a ship-to-ship transfer in order to allow it to have a small enough draught topass through the Suez. Plus, spreading the cargo of crude across two ships increases the odds of some of it making it to its final destination. Thisis exactly what Beleristhinks will happen.

"Realistically, there's two choices," he saidin an interview. "Either off-load it somewhere onshore in Turkey or Syria, or put part of the cargo into another tanker, and perhaps both of them will deliver it." Failing that, both tankers will likely try to cross through the neutral waters ofthe Suez back to Iran and come up with another plan. "Because nobody else is taking Iranian crude," he says.

If a secondtankeris indeed the plan, he expects the ship will soon turn off its transponder to try to hide its position. "It's probably going to disappear soon, I think," he said.

Some shipping observers think they may have already spotted the ideal candidate for such a ship-to-ship transfer. Ship monitoring firm TankerTrackers.com noticedanother Iranian tanker, the Argo, has begun to move brisklyup through the Red Sea and into the Suez Canal. It's currently loaded down with 700,000 barrels of its ownoil, but once those can be off-loaded somewhere, it should be in an ideal position to meet up with the Adrian Darya in the waters north of Port Said, Egypt, where the Suez Canal flows into the Mediterranean.

A new-found status

Iran, for its part, insists that there's nothing fishy going on, and says the oil has in fact already been sold to an unnamed mystery buyer. "The Islamic Republic of Iran has sold the oil of this ship, and now the owner and purchaser of this oil will decide the destination of the cargo,"government spokespersonAli Rabieitold Reuters on Monday.

Perhaps as evidence of that, the ship updated its destination from Mersin to "for order" on Monday, an indication that it claims to be available oncommission to anyone wishing to hire it.

Despite its new-found status as an alleged free agent, the ship made a visible northward turn on Tuesday and seems headed towards Turkey and Syria, as some suspected.

The U.S., meanwhile, is having none of this. National Security Adviser John Bolton, who has long held animosity for the Iranian regime, said Monday it would be "all hands on deck" as the U.S. works to seize the vessel, which he said"must not be allowed off-loaded in port or at sea."

If something fishy is going on, it wouldn't be the first time that Iran has tried subterfuge to get its crude to a willing buyer. CBC News reported last fall on Tehran's attempts at using ghost ships tankers with their GPStransponders turned off, making them harder to track after Washington slapped sanctions on the country's oil.

But the circuitous route of the Adrian Darya is a step beyond even that. While there's nothing necessarily suspicious about a ship changing its name,even the vessel's chosen moniker seems designed to thumb its nose at its U.S. critics.

In Farsi, Adrian Darya loosely translates as "Hadrian's Sea" a possible nod to the Roman Emperor Hadrian who famously built a wall in northern Britain to keep out Celtic invaders from the empire he had built, which stretchedfrom Persia to Great Britain.

Naming the ship was a nod to the man who built a "wall that protected Iran's interests against Britain and was one of the best names to be given to this giant oil tanker after its victory over the West,"Iranian state-run Fars news agency was quoted as saying.

Maritime monitoring service MarineTraffic.com has called the ship "the most tracked ship in the world right now," with 21,000 online viewingsof their live map of the vessel on Monday alone.

Under normal circumstances, changing aship's name mid-journey could bean attempt to "take off some of the heat off," as Beleris puts it.

But given the heat of the intense gaze the world has cast on the ship since then, "I guess it didn't work very well."