Cargoes to Resume

India, the third-biggest buyer of Iranian oil, will offer state-backed insurance to tankers, helping the nation’s biggest sea carrier to resume cargoes from the Persian Gulf nation hit by international trade sanctions.

Iran Oil Shipping To Resume As Insurers Step In: Corporate India

By Pratish Narayanan and Karthikeyan Sundaram, Bloomberg

India, the third-biggest buyer of Iranian oil, will offer state-backed insurance to tankers, helping the nation’s biggest sea carrier to resume cargoes from the Persian Gulf nation hit by international trade sanctions.

Shipping Corp. of India will soon start services to Iran as Indian insurers have agreed to give as much as $100 million of cover per voyage, Chairman Sabyasachi Hajara said without specifying a timeframe. Prior to the sanctions, European companies provided unlimited protection against risks including oil spills and collisions, he said.

The resumption of services will help Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals Ltd. (MRPL), India’s biggest buyer of Iranian crude, and other state processors secure supplies after European Union measures disrupted trade. The sanctions, prompted by Iran’s nuclear plans, also affect shipments to China, Japan and South Korea as 95 percent of oil tankers are insured by the 13 members of London-based International Group of P&I Clubs.

“As far as India is concerned, we are bothered about our sovereign requirements,” Hajara said in a July 31 interview at the company’s Mumbai headquarters. “We took a pragmatic view.”

Mangalore Refinery halted purchases from Iran after the sanctions made it impossible to get ships to carry the crude, Managing Director P.P. Upadhya said last week. That prompted the company to buy more of its requirements from the spot market where prices are typically higher.

Iran was the fourth-biggest supplier of crude to the South Asian nation in the year ended in March, according to the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India. The country purchased about 18 million tons of Iranian oil, the New Delhi-based lobby group said on May 8.

‘No Option’

“Being a sovereign entity, Shipping Corp. has to follow certain directions in the larger interest of the nation,” said Chetan Kapoor, a Mumbai-based analyst with IDBI Capital Market Services Ltd. “They don’t have much of an option.”

The EU ban on the purchase and insurance of Iranian oil targets the nation’s disputed nuclear program that the U.S. and its allies say is a cover for developing atomic weapons. Iran has said the program is for civilian energy and medical research.

U.S.-led sanctions against Iran are costing OPEC’s third- largest producer $133 million a day in lost sales. Shipments from Iran have plunged by 1.2 million barrels a day, or 52 percent, since the sanctions banning the purchase, transport, financing and insuring of the nation’s crude began July 1, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

In June, Japan’s parliament passed a bill to provide $7.6 billion of sovereign insurance to tanker owners that carry Iranian oil. Importers in China and South Korea are also seeking alternative covers or have relied on Iran’s fleet after International Group members, who follow EU law, stopped covering shipments.

India Exempted

Indian refiners will buy 11 percent less crude from Iran this year, junior oil minister R.P.N. Singh said in May, after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged the country to cut purchases. A month later, the U.S. exempted India from its financial sanctions on oil imports from the Islamic Republic.

Indian government officials including Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai and Oil Minister Jaipal Reddy have said the country will follow sanctions imposed only by the United Nations and isn’t bound by the U.S. and EU measures against Iran.

The global sanctions have also affected Shipping Corp. The company has decided to end its joint-venture with the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, Hajara said July 25. Assets of the venture will be split between the two partners, he said.

Assets Frozen

IRISL’s assets are blocked and frozen in the U.S. The Indian company has 49 percent in the three-decade-old venture, Irano Hind Shipping Co., which operates six vessels, according to the Iranian shipping line’s website.

Bulk carriers such as tankers contributed to as much as 67 percent of Shipping Corp. (SCI)’s 38 billion-rupee ($684 million) sales in the year ended in March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It posted a loss of 4.3 billion rupees in the period, its first annual deficit in at least two decades, because of higher fuel prices and finance costs.

Shipping Corp. will stick to its orders for 25 ships that are due for delivery by 2014, Hajara said in the interview. The company, 64 percent owned by Indian government, had 75 ships in its fleet as of March.

The carrier was little changed at 55.65 rupees at close of trading in Mumbai today. The stock has risen 16 percent this year, after plunging 63 percent in 2011.

Reinsurance Blocked

Hajara said insurers including United India Insurance Co. and General Insurance Corp. of India are offering a lower cover for Iranian shipments compared with their European counterparts because the sanctions blocked their access to reinsurance.

The Indian insurers are offering $50 million of hull and machinery cover and $50 million of protection and indemnity per voyage, he said. Two calls each to the chairman’s office of United India and General Insurance in Chennai and Mumbai weren’t answered today.

Shipping Corp. is going ahead with the plan as its studies have shown that carriers in the Iran-India route haven’t sought any claims from insurance companies in the past 10 years, he said. Still, potential liabilities may run into “billions of dollars,” Hajara said.

IDBI Capital’s Kapoor said the Indian government may bail out Shipping Corp. should the company face any claims stemming from accidents.

“As a sovereign entity, if ever they face any liquidity issue, they are likely to be covered by the government,” he said. “I don’t see the size of the cover as a worry.”

Source: Bloomberg

Photograph of Shipping Corp. of India Chairman Sabyasachi Hajara by Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

To contact the reporters on this story: Pratish Narayanan in Mumbai at pnarayanan9@bloomberg.net; Karthikeyan Sundaram in New Delhi at kmeenakshisu@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alexander Kwiatkowski at akwiatkowsk2@bloomberg.net; Neil Denslow at ndenslow@bloomberg.net

Previous Article
Next Article

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *