Iranian Oil Storage Surges Amid U.S. Blockade
According to a Financial Times analysis of shipping and satellite imagery data reported on Tuesday, the volume of Iranian oil stored on tankers in and around the Strait of Hormuz has risen significantly in recent weeks. This increase comes as Iran explores methods to bypass a U.S. naval blockade in the Gulf of Oman, which was initiated in mid-April with the aim of halting Iranian oil exports and pressuring Tehran into an agreement.
The data from the U.S.-based nonprofit organization United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) indicates that the number of tankers in the Persian Gulf carrying Iranian crude and petrochemicals has climbed to 49, up from 29 before the blockade began on April 13. Additionally, UANI and the Financial Times have identified more than a dozen tankers gathered near the Iranian port of Chabahar, located outside the Strait of Hormuz but within the blockade zone.
Tanker Concentrations Suggest Sanctions Evasion Efforts
Ship-tracking and maritime intelligence analyses from three weeks ago showed Iranian oil tankers loitering in a cluster near Chabahar, suggesting that Iran continues to load oil onto its tankers in an effort to move them out of the Middle East. Meanwhile, the accumulation of vessels outside the Strait of Hormuz but inside the U.S. blockade line indicates that American interception efforts are proving effective.
According to Kpler estimates cited by the Financial Times, approximately 42 million barrels of Iranian crude are now sitting on Iranian tankers—many of them aging vessels—in the Middle East, representing a 65% surge compared to the start of the war. Windward, a maritime intelligence firm, reported last week that loadings at Iran’s key export port, Kharg Island, have come to a standstill.
Maritime Intelligence Reveals Sanctions Evasion Tactics
Windward analysts noted that concentrations of dark tankers across northern Hormuz, eastern Hormuz, and Chabahar suggest Iran is increasingly relying on protected holding zones to buffer export capacity and manage outbound flows. Persistent ship-to-ship transfer activity, bunkering operations, and prolonged dark anchorage behavior further indicate that covert cargo transfers and sanctions evasion operations are expanding inside Iranian territorial waters.
The Financial Times analysis suggests that the U.S. blockade has had a significant impact on Iran’s oil exports, leading to increased storage volumes and creative methods to circumvent international sanctions. As tensions between the United States and Iran continue to escalate, it remains to be seen how these developments will shape the global energy landscape.
Original Article: Iran Oil Storage Hits 42 Million Barrels as U.S. Blockade Bites: FT Analysis — Indexbox
