EXCLUSIVE: US mulls plan to inspect tankers hauling Iranian oil
Trump vows ‘maximum pressure’ to drive Iran oil exports to zero
06 March 2025 - 15:31
byJonathan Saul and , Jarrett Renshaw
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The Liberian-flagged oil tanker Ice Energy transfers crude oil from the Iranian-flagged oil tanker Lana (former Pegas), off the shore of Karystos, on the Island of Evia, Greece, May 26, 2022. File Picture: REUTERS/Costas Baltas
Washington — President Donald Trump’s administration is considering a plan to stop and inspect Iranian oil tankers at sea under an international accord aimed at countering the spread of weapons of mass destruction, sources familiar with the matter said.
Trump has vowed to restore a “maximum pressure” campaign to isolate Iran from the global economy and drive its oil exports to zero, to stop the country from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
Trump hit Iran with two waves of fresh sanctions in the first weeks of his second term, targeting companies and the so-called shadow fleet of ageing oil tankers that sail without Western insurance and transport crude from sanctioned countries.
Those moves have largely been in line with the limited measures implemented during former president Joe Biden’s administration, during which Iran succeeded in ramping up oil exports through complex smuggling networks.
US officials are now looking at ways for allied countries to stop and inspect ships sailing through critical chokepoints such as the Strait of Malacca in Asia and other sea lanes, according to six sources who asked not to be named due to the sensitive subject.
That would delay delivery of crude to refiners. It could also expose parties involved in facilitating the trade to reputational damage and sanctions, the sources said.
“You don’t have to sink ships or arrest people to have that chilling effect that this is just not worth the risk,” one of the sources said.
“The delay in delivery ... instils uncertainty in that illicit trade network.”
The administration was examining whether inspections at sea could be conducted under the auspices of the Proliferation Security Initiative launched in 2003, which aims to prevent the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction.
The US drove that initiative, which has been signed by more than 100 governments.
This mechanism could enable foreign governments to target Iran’s oil shipments at Washington’s request, one of the sources said, effectively delaying deliveries and hitting supply chains Tehran relies upon for revenue.
The National Security Council, which formulates policy in the White House, was looking into possible inspections at sea, two of the sources said.
It was unclear if Washington had yet approached any signatories to the Proliferation Security Initiative to test their willingness to co-operate with the proposal.
John Bolton, who was the US lead negotiator for the initiative when it was formed, said: “it would be fully justified” to use the initiative to slow down Iran oil exports. He noted that selling oil was “obviously critical to raise revenue for the government of Iran to conduct both its proliferation activities and support for terrorism”.
The White House National Security Council did not respond to requests for comment.
Iran’s oil and foreign ministries did not respond to separate requests for comment.
President Masoud Pezeshkian told Iran’s parliament on March 2 that Trump “has once again signed an order sanctioning many of our ships at sea, leaving them uncertain about how to unload their oil and gas cargo”. He was referring to Trump’s latest round of sanctions.
POTENTIAL BLOWBACK
Previous attempts to seize Iranian oil cargoes have triggered retaliation by Iran.
The US tried to interdict at least two cargoes of Iranian oil in 2023, under Biden. This prompted Iran to seize foreign ships — including one chartered by Chevron Corporation, which sent crude prices higher.
The low oil price environment gives Trump more options to block Iranian oil flows, from sanctions on tanker companies to seizing ships, according to Ben Cahill, an energy analyst at the Center for Energy and Environmental Systems at the University of Texas.
“I think if prices stay below $75 a barrel, the White House has more latitude to look at sanctions that would affect, you know, supply from Iran and other countries. It would be much harder to do this in a $92 per barrel environment,” he said.
Aggressive US action could cut Iran exports by about 750,000 barrels per day in the short term, Cahill said, but the longer the sanctions are in place, the less effective they are as Iran and buyers figure out ways around them.
A speedy resumption of oil exports from Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region would help offset any fall in Iranian exports. Reuters previously reported that the White House is piling pressure on Iraq to allow Kurdish oil exports to restart or face sanctions alongside Iran.
Despite US sanctions in recent years, Tehran's oil exports brought in $53bn in 2023 and $54bn a year earlier, largely in trades with China, according to US Energy Information Administration estimates.
Iran relies on oil exports to China for vital revenue. Russia, which faces restrictions on oil exports and broader Western sanctions, is similarly focused on shipping oil to buyers in China and India.
Finland and other Nordic countries have warned in recent months of the dangers of ships sailing close to their shores and the environmental risks they pose to their shores in oil spills if there is an accident.
While European countries have spoken about inspections of ships transporting Russian oil suspected of not having valid insurance, little action has been taken and none mooted for vessels hauling Iranian oil.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
EXCLUSIVE: US mulls plan to inspect tankers hauling Iranian oil
Trump vows ‘maximum pressure’ to drive Iran oil exports to zero
Washington — President Donald Trump’s administration is considering a plan to stop and inspect Iranian oil tankers at sea under an international accord aimed at countering the spread of weapons of mass destruction, sources familiar with the matter said.
Trump has vowed to restore a “maximum pressure” campaign to isolate Iran from the global economy and drive its oil exports to zero, to stop the country from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
Trump hit Iran with two waves of fresh sanctions in the first weeks of his second term, targeting companies and the so-called shadow fleet of ageing oil tankers that sail without Western insurance and transport crude from sanctioned countries.
Those moves have largely been in line with the limited measures implemented during former president Joe Biden’s administration, during which Iran succeeded in ramping up oil exports through complex smuggling networks.
US officials are now looking at ways for allied countries to stop and inspect ships sailing through critical chokepoints such as the Strait of Malacca in Asia and other sea lanes, according to six sources who asked not to be named due to the sensitive subject.
That would delay delivery of crude to refiners. It could also expose parties involved in facilitating the trade to reputational damage and sanctions, the sources said.
“You don’t have to sink ships or arrest people to have that chilling effect that this is just not worth the risk,” one of the sources said.
“The delay in delivery ... instils uncertainty in that illicit trade network.”
The administration was examining whether inspections at sea could be conducted under the auspices of the Proliferation Security Initiative launched in 2003, which aims to prevent the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction.
The US drove that initiative, which has been signed by more than 100 governments.
This mechanism could enable foreign governments to target Iran’s oil shipments at Washington’s request, one of the sources said, effectively delaying deliveries and hitting supply chains Tehran relies upon for revenue.
The National Security Council, which formulates policy in the White House, was looking into possible inspections at sea, two of the sources said.
It was unclear if Washington had yet approached any signatories to the Proliferation Security Initiative to test their willingness to co-operate with the proposal.
John Bolton, who was the US lead negotiator for the initiative when it was formed, said: “it would be fully justified” to use the initiative to slow down Iran oil exports. He noted that selling oil was “obviously critical to raise revenue for the government of Iran to conduct both its proliferation activities and support for terrorism”.
The White House National Security Council did not respond to requests for comment.
Iran’s oil and foreign ministries did not respond to separate requests for comment.
President Masoud Pezeshkian told Iran’s parliament on March 2 that Trump “has once again signed an order sanctioning many of our ships at sea, leaving them uncertain about how to unload their oil and gas cargo”. He was referring to Trump’s latest round of sanctions.
POTENTIAL BLOWBACK
Previous attempts to seize Iranian oil cargoes have triggered retaliation by Iran.
The US tried to interdict at least two cargoes of Iranian oil in 2023, under Biden. This prompted Iran to seize foreign ships — including one chartered by Chevron Corporation, which sent crude prices higher.
The low oil price environment gives Trump more options to block Iranian oil flows, from sanctions on tanker companies to seizing ships, according to Ben Cahill, an energy analyst at the Center for Energy and Environmental Systems at the University of Texas.
“I think if prices stay below $75 a barrel, the White House has more latitude to look at sanctions that would affect, you know, supply from Iran and other countries. It would be much harder to do this in a $92 per barrel environment,” he said.
Aggressive US action could cut Iran exports by about 750,000 barrels per day in the short term, Cahill said, but the longer the sanctions are in place, the less effective they are as Iran and buyers figure out ways around them.
A speedy resumption of oil exports from Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region would help offset any fall in Iranian exports. Reuters previously reported that the White House is piling pressure on Iraq to allow Kurdish oil exports to restart or face sanctions alongside Iran.
Despite US sanctions in recent years, Tehran's oil exports brought in $53bn in 2023 and $54bn a year earlier, largely in trades with China, according to US Energy Information Administration estimates.
Iran relies on oil exports to China for vital revenue. Russia, which faces restrictions on oil exports and broader Western sanctions, is similarly focused on shipping oil to buyers in China and India.
Finland and other Nordic countries have warned in recent months of the dangers of ships sailing close to their shores and the environmental risks they pose to their shores in oil spills if there is an accident.
While European countries have spoken about inspections of ships transporting Russian oil suspected of not having valid insurance, little action has been taken and none mooted for vessels hauling Iranian oil.
Reuters
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