Tanker owners command high rates in wake of price cap and other restrictions
Tankers in Iran’s “ghost fleet” have
switched to carrying Russian oil since
western curbs on Moscow intensified in
December, as the Kremlin turned to
sanctions-busting techniques pioneered
by Tehran.
At least 16 vessels that formed part of
the ghost network that allowed Iran to
breach US sanctions have begun to ship
Russian crude oil over the past two
months, according to Financial Times
research. Before the surge, just nine vessels had switched on to the Russian
route during the nine months since the
start of the war in February last year.
So-called ghost ships are vessels that
disguise their ownership and movements to facilitate breaches of sanctions. Networks of ghost ships enable
the trade in Iranian and Venezuelan oil.
Shipbrokers and analysts said Russia
was enticing tanker owners and operators with premium rates, as it sought to
shield its main source of export revenues from western measures such as the
G7/EU oil price cap. Estimated Russian
oil export revenue is markedly down on
its prewar levels.
“We have seen a number of vessels
involved in Russian trade that previously did Iranian barrels,” said Svetlana
Lobaciova, a tanker analyst at shipbrokers EA Gibson in London.
“The premium for Russian trade is at
least 50 per cent above the normal market rates and could be even more than
100 per cent in some instances, making
the economics even more attractive
than shipping Iranian oil.”
Iran has been able to maintain or even
increase its crude exports in recent
months. Tehran, which co-operates on
oil policy with Moscow through the
Opec+ group, has emerged as a key
backer for Russian president Vladimir
Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.
Competition for vessels is a possible
source of tension in the relationship.
However, Matthew Wright, an analyst at
Kpler, a data and analytics company said: “An increase in the number of
ships in the ghost fleets owned through
secretive offshore entities, which enables sanctions evasion, appears to have
helped avoid much of a problem with
sourcing vessels.”
The FT identified vessels involved in
the Iranian ghost fleet using a list of 288
ships subject to sanctions-breaching
complaints to marine registries and
insurance companies by United Against
Nuclear Iran, a US-based group that
campaigns for sanctions enforcement.
The FT checked the methods used by
UANI for identifying ghost fleet members by reviewing a sample of its analyses, which are based on ship movement
data and satellite photography. The FT
also checked that the findings on specific ships were consistent with those of
other organisations. Data from Kpler
was then used to monitor these vessels’
recent cargoes.
Strains in tanker markets are
expected to be exacerbated in the coming weeks. EU sanctions and the G7
price cap were both extended on Sunday to include Russia’s exports of
refined fuels such as diesel and petrol.
Russia has already sought to reroute a
lot of its crude to Asia after a ban on seaborne imports to the EU took effect on
December 5. It will probably need to
ship diesel and other fuels longer distances now that a similar ban is in place.
Western sanctions targeting Russia
are less onerous than US sanctions targeting Iran. The G7 price cap is also
partly designed to limit revenues to the
Kremlin while keeping enough Russian
barrels in the market to avoid shortages.
Shipbrokers said terms made the Russian trade more attractive than dealing
with Iran or other heavily sanctioned
countries such as Venezuela. Ship owners and operators are less likely to fall
foul of the measures if they can show
they were told the Russian fuel was sold
under the cap.
FT analysis suggests the volumes of
Russian crude being shipped on vessels
identified as being part of the ghost fleet
rose from less than 3mn barrels in November to more than 9mn in January.
One shipbroker said that while a handful of big tanker operators were shunning Russian oil trade, such as western
oil majors and US ship operators, many
others were taking part given the rates
on offer and leeway in the rules.
“Everyone is a sinner now,” the shipbroker said. “The line between the grey
market and the conventional tanker
market has definitely gotten blurrier in
the past year.”
Some of the ships now serving the
Russian route are vessels previously
identified as likely to be part of Moscow’s own shadow fleet, a covertly controlled operation assembled over the
past year. Shipbrokers have estimated
that it consists of about 100 vessels.
Claire Jungman, chief of staff at UANI,
said: “The ownership behind [ghost
fleet] . . . vessels is often very opaque
and disguised through numerous front
companies that are constantly changing
to avoid sanctions.