Iran

Who Imports Iranian Oil?

The White House has announced it will end exemptions from sanctions for countries buying oil from Iran. Waivers for China, India, Japan, South Korea and Turkey are set to expire in May and those countries could face U.S. sanctions themselves. The U.S. move is aimed at significantly reducing Iranian oil exports which are the government's main source of revenue.

While Japan and South Korea have halted or sharply decreased imports of Iranian oil, China and Turkey have slammed the U.S. decision. Beijing in particular has said that its trade with Iran is legal and that the U.S. has no right to interfere. Turkey said it cannot cut its ties with Iran as it's a neighboring country and that the oil imports are badly needed. According to Bloomberg's Tanker Tracking, China imported 613,000 barrels or Iranian oil per day in March, while South Korea and India imported 387,000 and 258,000 respectively.

The move to end waivers resulted in the price of global benchmark crude rising 3.33 percent to $74.37 in trading on Monday, its highest level since 1 November, 2018. The commander of the Revolutionary Guards’ navy threatened to close the strategically important Strait of Hormuz passageway if Tehran is barred from using it, a move the U.S. has said would be unacceptable.

Description

This chart shows oil imports from Iran in March 2019 (barrels per day)*.

Download Chart
Monthly average crude oil prices of the OPEC basket 2022-2024
Brent crude oil price annually 1976-2024
Monthly crude oil price average for Brent 2022-2024
Premium statistics
Crude oil production per month in China 2021-2024
Premium statistics
Import value of crude oil per month in China 2021-2024
WTI and Brent crude oil's average annual spot prices 1990-2023

Any more questions?

Get in touch with us quickly and easily.
We are happy to help!

Do you still have questions?

Feel free to contact us anytime using our contact form or visit our FAQ page.

Statista Content & Design

Need infographics, animated videos, presentations, data research or social media charts?

More Information