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Gas flares from an oil
production platform at the Soroush oil fields in the Persian Gulf.
Collectively, the EU import 500,000 barrels of Iranian oil per day, the
largest market for Iranian crude, rivalling China (Reuters) |
The European Union is expected to bring forward a meeting of
foreign ministers due to decide on an oil embargo on Iran by one week to
January 23, EU diplomats said on Monday.
They said a final decision would be taken by a meeting of EU
ambassadors in Brussels on Tuesday, and the aim would be to avoid
overshadowing a summit of EU leaders set for January 30.
"It looks likely it will be brought forward to the 23rd," one of the diplomats said.
EU states have already agreed in principle to an embargo on Iranian
oil, part of the latest Western effort to ratchet up pressure on Tehran
over its nuclear programme.
However, they still have to finalise details of when it will be
imposed. Diplomats say the embargo could take several months to start
because some EU capitals want a delay to shield their debt-stricken
economies.
EU countries have proposed "grace periods" on existing contracts of
between one month and 12 months to allow them to find alternative
supplies.
Greece, which depends heavily on Iranian crude, is pushing for the
longest delay, the diplomats said. Britain, France, the Netherlands and
Germany wanted a maximum grace period of three months.
The goal had originally been for a final decision on January 30,
but the decision to move the foreign ministers' meeting will increase
pressure for a quicker decision.
A diplomat said an EU working group meeting on Monday had not appeared to narrow the differences.
European measures against Iran's oil industry will complement U.S.
sanctions announced on New Year's Eve that aim to make it impossible for
most countries' refineries to buy Iranian crude.
Iran is the second-largest producer of oil, after Saudi Arabia,
among the 12 countries in Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC), producing around 3.5m barrels per day.
EU countries buy about 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Iran's 2.6m
bpd in exports, making the bloc collectively the largest market for
Iranian crude, rivalling China.
The three biggest EU importers have serious debt problems. Greece
imports a quarter of its oil from Iran, Italy about 13 percent and Spain
nearly 10 percent.
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