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March 8, 2016 9:43 pm

Iran, India disagree over settling oil dues

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NEW DELHI: New signs show Iran and India have hit a roadblock over settling some $6 billion in oil dues from previous purchases of crude oil by New Delhi from Tehran.

India’s media reported on Sunday that Gholamali Kamyab, the vice governor of the Central Bank of Iran (CBI), will travel to India later this month to discuss differences with officials in New Delhi over a mechanism to get Iran’s oil money back from the country.

The difference reportedly involves the foreign exchange rate for the sum that India owes Iran.

Iran sold oil to refiners like Essar Oil and Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd (MRPL) in US dollar per barrel. Around 45% of the oil bill was paid in rupees in a UCO Bank account while the rest 55% was to be cleared whenever banking channels open with the removal of the anti-Iran sanctions, reported the Business Standard. 

Rupee to a US dollar was under 55 in February 2013 when the 45:55 payment system became operational. Rupee to a US dollar is at 67 now.

Ideally, if refiners had kept dollar equivalent to their purchase in separate account over the years they could have readily paid Iran now. But for a barrel of oil they bought in February 2013 at say $80, they would now have to pay Rs 5,360 instead of Rs 4,400 then, added the Business Standard.

Sources said Iran wants its dollar dues in full without factoring in the exchange rate. Refiners like Essar Oil on the other hand want to pay rupee equivalent of the purchase at current rate.

Tehran has told India that the three-year old mechanism of paying 45% of oil import bill in rupees and keeping the remaining 55% pending for payment channels to clear, has come to an end.

It will be opening or re-activating euro accounts with Indian banks and would like to have the past money transferred from refiners into these accounts.

Iran is talking to State Bank of India for the purpose and has also opened an account with IDBI.

Also, it wants settlement with India through the Asian Currency Union (ACU) and has written to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in this respect, they said.

The National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) would ask buyers of crude in India to open Letters of Credit (LCs) in favor of Central Bank of Iran with SBI as was the case in past, the Business Standard has quoted sources as saying, adding that settlement could be done through the ACU and IDBI would be used for the purpose. 

SHELL PAYS OFF DEBT

Anglo Dutch energy giant Royal Dutch Shell has paid off its debt to Iran as UAE’s retailer Emirates National Oil Company (ENOC) settles most of its oil dues from past purchases, reports say.  

Reuters said on Monday that Shell had completed the payment of 1.77 billion euros ($1.94 billion) in debt to the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) in the wake of the lifting of sanctions on the country.

“Following the lifting of applicable EU and US sanctions, we can confirm that payment of the outstanding Shell debt to NIOC has now been made,” a Shell spokesman said in a statement.

Payments equivalent to the full amount of the debt for unpaid oil deliveries was made in euros over the past three weeks, Shell said.

Meanwhile, UAE’s ENOC has repaid some 50 percent of its 5.3 billion euros in debts to Iran, IRNA reported on Thursday.

Tehran will reportedly receive the rest of ENOC debts and other foreign companies’ oil dues by the end of the Iranian calendar year (March 19).

Officials have already announced that the country seeks to recover tens of billions of dollars of oil dues in euros following the removal of anti-Iran sanction in January.

India, however, has insisted on repaying debts in its national currency, the rupee – – a move Iran has been unwilling to accept over the time issue in converting the rupee into a third currency.

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