• 15 mins House Committee Set to Boost Oil and Gas Drilling on Federal Lands
  • 1 hour Oil Price Slide Triggers Demand Jump and Slight Rebound
  • 4 hours Shale Major Sees U.S. Oil Production Peaking
  • 15 hours Trump: Low Oil Prices Put U.S. In Good Negotiating Position With Russia
  • 18 hours Guyana Should Hedge Against Oil Price Slumps, Ex Finance Minister Says
  • 19 hours Saudi Arabia and India at Odds Over Crude Supply to Possible Joint Refineries
  • 20 hours Morgan Stanley Slashes Brent Oil Price Forecast to $62.50
  • 22 hours Saudi Arabia Raises Oil Price to Asia as OPEC+ Boosts Supply Further
  • 23 hours Goldman Sachs Slashes Its Oil Price Forecast Yet Again
  • 24 hours EU Has Limited Legal Options to Cut Off Russian Gas Supply
  • 1 day The End of an Era for Berkshire Hathaway as Buffett Steps Down
  • 1 day Mining Major Hails Massive Copper Discovery
  • 1 day Shell Reportedly Studying BP Bid
  • 1 day OPEC+ Plans Faster Rollback of Output Cuts
  • 3 days OPEC+ Stuns Market With Larger Than Expected Output Hike
  • 4 days New Budget Proposal Cuts Clean Energy Funding, Expands Fossil Fuel Research
  • 4 days OPEC Moves Up Meeting To Discuss Oil Production Quotas
  • 4 days Imperial Oil Q1 Earnings Rise on Higher Refining Margins
  • 4 days Europe’s Natural Gas Prices Rise as China Hints at U.S. Trade Talks
  • 4 days Permian Basin Growth Fuels ExxonMobil’s Quarterly Success
  • 4 days Improved Refining Margins Help Chevron Meet Q1 Profit Estimates
  • 4 days Indian Refiner BPCL Looks to Source Cheaper U.S. LPG in Swap Deal
  • 4 days Shell Continues Share Buybacks After Strong Q1 Earnings
  • 4 days Trump Administration Challenges State Climate Laws in Court
  • 4 days Qatar and Japan Discuss Major LNG Supply Deal
  • 5 days Venezuela Desperate For China To Buy More Oil
  • 5 days OPEC Plot Twist? Bloomberg Survey Shows Production Drop in April
  • 5 days Congress Just Sideswiped California’s EV Crusade
  • 5 days IMF Slashes Growth Forecast for Middle East Exporters as Oil Prices Dip
  • 5 days UN Pushes Back Against Trump’s Deep Sea Minerals Mining Plans
  • 5 days Russia Slashes Energy Revenue Forecast by 24% as Oil Prices Dip
  • 5 days Strong European Demand Pushes U.S. LNG Exports Up by 20%
  • 5 days S&P Downgrades Woodside Outlook to Negative After Louisiana LNG Go-Ahead
  • 5 days Fusion Project Completes World’s Most Powerful Magnet System
  • 5 days Tony Blair Says Efforts to Phase Out Fossil Fuels Are “Doomed to Fail”
  • 5 days Lindsay Graham Pushes for More Russia Sanctions
  • 5 days U.S. and Ukraine Sign Minerals Deal
  • 6 days Is Saudi Arabia Preparing for Another Oil Price War?
  • 6 days Ukrainian Economy Minister En Route To DC to Sign Critical Minerals Deal
  • 6 days Repsol Affirms Buyback and Dividend Policy as Profit Beats Estimates

Turkish Port Halts Russian Oil Imports Amid Sanctions Pressure

A Turkish oil terminal on the Mediterranean will stop importing Russian oil amid intensified U.S. sanctions pressure on Moscow’s exports, the terminal’s operator told Reuters on Tuesday.

Global Terminal Services (GTS) operates the mid-sized Dortyol terminal on the Mediterranean and it has decided to stop accepting Russia-origin volumes to avoid possible connections to Russian oil.

“GTS decided to cut all possible connections to Russian oil and declared accordingly to its customers in late February 2024 that even if there is no breach of any laws, regulations or sanctions, it would not accept any product of Russian origin or any products loaded from Russian ports as an additional measure to the sanction rules in effect,” the company told Reuters.

All previous imports of Russian oil have been in compliance with the applicable sanctions, including the G7 price cap on Russian crude and petroleum products, GTS added. 

After the EU banned imports of Russian crude and products last year, Turkey has become one of the biggest importers of Russian oil.

However, a recent U.S. sanctions threat to impose secondary sanctions on financial firms and other intermediaries doing business with Russia has already resulted in lower Turkish-Russian trade, including in oil.

Trade between Russia and Turkey has suffered a setback since late December with some payments for imported Russian oil cargoes delayed, as banks are boosting compliance checks following a U.S. threat to sanction financial institutions for facilitating business with Russia.

In December, U.S. President Joe Biden issued an executive order, which authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, to potentially impose sanctions on a foreign financial institution if it is found to have “conducted or facilitated any significant transaction or transactions for or on behalf of any person designated” in the sanctions against Russia.      

As a result of this new sanctions threat, payments have been disrupted with some delays seen in payments for oil cargoes that Turkey imports from Russia, multiple sources with knowledge of the situation told Reuters last month.   

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:



Join the discussion | Back to homepage


ADVERTISEMENT


Leave a comment
  • Mamdouh Salameh on March 05 2024 said:
    Such sporadic incidents amid sanctions pressures are no news. They aim reminding the world that sanctions are alive and kinking in case they are forgotten.

    The whole world knows that Western sanctions against Russia have failed miserably and that
    Russia has already won the energy war decisively.

    Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
    Internatioal Oil Economist
    Global Energy Expert

Leave a comment

EXXON Mobil -0.35
Open57.81 Trading Vol.6.96M Previous Vol.241.7B
BUY 57.15
Sell 57.00
Oilprice - The No. 1 Source for Oil & Energy News