Reportedly, Iranian oil exports increased by 30% during the first quarter of 2022 as compared to the same period in the previous year, to 870,000 barrels per day (bpd).
The jump in Iran’s oil exports in Q1 was the fastest among all producers in West Asia, while the volume of exports is estimated to be the highest since former US President Donald Trump withdrew from the Iranian nuclear deal in 2018, the report said.
China is a major buyer of Iranian crude oil which has never stopped buying Iranian oil even during the sanctions. Now, the Asian country is emboldened to import more oil from Iran, not expecting to be hit by US sanctions “because Washington has its plate full with Russia,” an analyst told the Journal.
Earlier this month, Washington Free Beacon, an American conservative political journalism website, said in a report that Iran's fleet of ghost ships has been successfully sidestepping US sanctions, delivering millions of barrels of crude oil and petroleum products to foreign destinations.
The report claimed that Iranian oil tankers have shipped at least US$22 billion worth of oil only to China since 2021.
According to Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, the country's oil exports have increased by 40% in recent months.
Iran’s crude oil production in March reached 2.546 million bpd to register a 7,000-barrel increase as compared to the figure for February, according to OPEC’s latest monthly report.
The country produced 2.539 million bpd of crude oil in February, the report said citing secondary sources.
The Islamic Republic’s average crude output for the first quarter of 2022 stood at 2.528 million bpd indicating a 56,000-bpd increase compared to the figure for the fourth quarter of the previous year, the report indicated.
The country’s heavy crude oil price also increased by US$19.36 in March, a 20.8% rise as compared to the previous month, according to the OPEC report.