Iran’s swelling floating oil stockpile is the evidence of a deeper problem. The country has become an unreliable, opaque, and politically fragile supplier whose barrels are increasingly treated as distressed cargoes rather than a dependable energy supply.
As of July 1, more than 58 million barrels of Iranian crude and condensate were sitting on the water, according to Kpler. More than 90% of those volumes had no clear destination, with many tankers marked only as “for orders” or assigned vague routes such as Singapore, a frequent waypoint for ship-to-ship transfers that obscure the final buyer and cargo origin. At least 20 million barrels had already been idling in Asian waters for a week or more, an extraordinary figure for a producer that wants to present itself as a relevant and stable exporter.
Continue reading How Iran Destroyed Its Credibility as a Supplier