Corporate Activities Should Not Be Affected by Iran Sanctions, Japan Tells US


TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Japanese delegates told US counterparts during a recent meeting in Washington that Japanese corporate activities should not be impacted by looming sanctions against Iran, Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

During the latest meeting, "both sides actively discussed the US' reimposition of sanctions against Iran," while Tokyo reiterated its basic principle that Japanese corporate activity should not be impacted by the US sanctions, Japan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement Tuesday, Platts reported.

The meeting, the fourth round of its kind, came just over a month before US sanctions on Iran snap back on November 5. Tokyo has been seeking a US exemption for its Iranian oil imports as it sees the supplies as important for the country's energy security and businesses.

The meeting spearheaded by Hiroshi Oka, MOFA's Director-General, Middle Eastern and African Affairs Bureau, and Sandra Oudkirk, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Energy Resources, US Department of State, was attended by Japanese officials including from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, and US officials including from the Treasury and Department of Energy.

Japan's crude oil imports from Iran jumped 65% year on year in August, marking the fourth consecutive month of increase, according to the latest METI data. This signals domestic refiners' efforts to take as many cargoes as possible before US sanctions against Iran come into effect in November.

The 65% rise lifted Japan's imports of Iranian crude oil to 177,475 b/d in August, contributing to the 5.9% year-on-year rise in overall crude imports to 3.39 million b/d in the month.

Imports of Iranian crude in August edged down 3.3% from July, but the Persian Gulf producer was the fifth-largest supplier to Japan in the month, accounting for 5.2% of the total volume, according to METI data.

Japanese refiners have now temporarily suspended Iranian oil loadings ahead of US sanctions, while they are also closely monitoring government talks with Washington on securing a waiver to continue their imports, Petroleum Association of Japan President Takashi Tsukioka said on September 20.