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Oil minister: Iran oil sales to China will continue, even if UN sanction are activated.

Oil minister: Iran oil sales to China will continue, even if UN sanction are activated.

Iran's oil exports to China will continue, even if U.N. Sanctions are re-imposed, according to the so-called "snapback" mechanism, said Iran's Oil minister Mohsen Paknejad on Wednesday. This is as Iran and European countries struggle to come to an agreement to avoid sanctions. On Tuesday, the EU's chief of foreign policy Kaja Kallas and the foreign ministers from France, Britain, and Germany (the so-called E3) met with their Iranian counterparts on the sidelines the U.N. General Assembly to find a solution.

The E3 began a 30-day process on August 28 to reimpose U.N. Sanctions, accusing Tehran for failing to adhere to a 2015 agreement with world powers that was intended to prevent it from developing nuclear weapons. If no agreement is reached, sanctions will be implemented on September 27.

The Europeans demand that Iran allow U.N. inspectors access to its most sensitive facilities. They also want Iran to address its concerns over its stockpile of enriched Uranium and begin talks with the United States.

Paknejad, when asked about the oil sales to China following possible snapback sanctions, said: "They will be continued, we have no problems."

He added that the snapback mechanism will not impose "new burdensome sanctions" on Iran's crude oil sales.

Paknejad stated that "in the past years, we've faced such severe restrictions due to the unilateral and unjust U.S. Sanctions, that in practice [UN sanctions] will not add much to the situation."

According to Kpler's data, China will account for almost four-fifths (75%) of Iranian oil imports in 2024.

(source: Reuters)