(Reuters) – Russia and Iran are helping Syria import fuel which it needs for heavy vehicles including
army tanks, allowing Damascus to avoid the full impact of tightening Western sanctions imposed over its violent suppression
of dissent.
Syria received regular shipments of Russian gasoil and diesel
over the winter and, despite Moscow’s diplomatic support for demands that the government stop its attacks and pull back its
forces, Russia sent another delivery this
month.
The shipments appear to be legal, as neither Russia nor Iran has signed up to Western sanctions barring such
trade, and Moscow has blocked U.N. Security Council sanctions that would apply to all countries.
But following the
convoluted paper trail of the shipments shows how difficult it is for the West to enforce sanctions designed to restrict
Syria’s military capability, as long as Moscow prevents U.N. action.
The fuel sent by Russia, known as gasoil, can be
marketed as diesel used for Syrian army tanks and heavy commercial vehicles, or as heating oil.
Oil producer Syria has two refineries, but also needs to
import large amounts of gasoil to meet domestic demand, both for heating and for transport.
Western sanctions prohibit
EU and U.S. firms from buying Syrian oil or doing business with Syrian companies handling imports of crude and refined
products.
Most former suppliers have dropped out for fear of violating measures designed to punish President Bashar
al-Assad for his crackdown on opponents.
That has forced Syria to rely for transport and heating fuel on a narrowing
pool of allies, including Iran, which faces its own tightening sanctions because of a nuclear program it says is peaceful but
the West says aims to produce an atomic bomb.
BLACKLIST
The latest delivery of Russian fuel reached Banias in
Syria from the port of Novorossiisk early this month, aboard the Liberia-flagged tanker Cape Benat.
Mahmoud El May,
who heads East Mediterranean trading at Monaco-based Galaxy Energy Group confirmed the cargo was bought from a Russian
company and delivered to Syria on April 12.
El May said deliveries were no longer possible for his firm because EU
sanctions in March had added Syria’s distribution company Mahrukat to the blacklist through which measures are
enforced.
The EU’s move has also forced Greek company Naftomar, previously a mainstay of Syrian imports, to halt
deliveries of the heating fuel liquefied petroleum gas used in Syrian homes and businesses.
Non-EU firms may be able
to take over from Galaxy and Naftomar, however, as sanctions apply only to firms based in the region.
Russia has
provided Syria with weapons and shielded Assad by blocking two U.N. Security Council resolutions condemning his government
for the crackdown, in which the United Nations says more than 9,000 people have been killed since March 2011.
Moscow
has criticized Assad at times and backed envoy Kofi Annan’s peace plan, including its demands for an end to violence and for
withdrawals of government forces from cities and towns.
But there is no evidence Russia is about to alter its stance
on trade with Syria. Moscow has criticized Western nations for imposing the sanctions, and along with China has blocked them in the Security Council, where Moscow and
Beijing hold vetoes.
Russia’s energy ministry on Thursday declined to comment on gasoil reaching Syria from Russian
ports. The foreign ministry, which is responsible for Russia’s policy on sanctions, declined immediate comment.
IRAN
EXCHANGES GASOIL FOR GASOLINE
Syria’s need for gasoil makes it a perfect fit to swap with Iran, which produces plenty
of diesel but has struggled for years to find sufficient supplies of gasoline, the fuel used in most civilian cars.
An
Iranian vessel completed an exchange this week in which it delivered around 32,000 tonnes of gasoil to Syria and returned to
Iran with about 33,000 tonnes of gasoline.
Oil refineries produce both gasoline and diesel in different proportions
depending on the quality of crude used and the design of the refinery.
According to International Energy Agency (IEA)
data for 2009, Syria needed to import more than 2.8 million tonnes of gasoil over the year, but it produced enough gasoline
and naphtha – a light fuel similar to gasoline – to have surpluses of those fuels for export.
The Syrian gasoline
cargo arrived aboard the tanker Alvan at the weekend, docking at an Iranian terminal in the Gulf near Bandar Abbas, according
to industry sources and ship tracking data.
Like many vessels associated with Iranian firms, the Alvan has repeatedly
changed names and ownership to skirt sanctions on Iran. According to DNV, an organization that classifies ships giving them
documents necessary for insurance, the Alvan changed names and owners three times since 2011.
Until February, it was
owned by Statira Maritime, a firm listed by the EU as a front for Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, which is subjected
to EU sanctions. Since then, the ship has withdrawn from DNV classification, instead listing on the Russian Maritime register
with new owners.
SYRIAN CRUDE
Syria’s own crude exports, while small by world standards, are important for the
government’s finances and have been hurt by an EU embargo. Iran appears to be helping by loading ships with Syrian crude and
bringing it into the Gulf, even though Tehran has been having difficulty finding buyers for its own sanctions-hit crude
exports.
An Iran-linked vessel, the MT Tour, loaded up with Syrian crude at the end of March and dropped anchor near
Iran’s Bandar Abbas in mid-April. It was initially bound for Singapore, but then appeared to change course.
A second
vessel, the Amin, loaded around 80,000 tonnes of heavy crude oil from Tartous, and a further 60,000 tonnes of light crude oil
from Banias, at the start of April. It has since sailed the same course as the MT Tour.
It is not clear where the
vessels will go next. As European and Asian customers cut back imports of Iranian oil due to sanctions, Iran has been storing
millions of barrels of its own oil in tankers at sea.
The Amin was previously registered in Malta, but like the M.T.
Tour, has recently changed its flag to Bolivia.
With Malta and Cyprus coming under increased pressure to stop flagging
Iranian government-linked ships, there has been a flurry of registrations in the last few months half a world away in
landlocked Bolivia.
(Additional reporting by Daniel Fineren, Humeyra Pamuk, Emma Farge, Melissa Akin and Jonathan Saul; Editing by
Anthony Barker and Peter
Graff)