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Iran declares U.S. sanctions on oil and energy markets will cause instability

The SHANA news outlet of the Ministry reported that Iran's Oil Minister said unilateral sanctions against crude producers would destabilise the energy markets. This was after U.S. president Donald Trump stated he would try to drive Tehran's exports of oil to zero.

"Depoliticising of the oil market is vital for energy security." Mohsen Paknejad, OPEC's Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais said that unilateral sanctions and pressure against major oil producers will destabilise the oil and energy market and harm consumers worldwide.

Paknejad made his comments after Trump restored the Iranian president's rights.

"maximum pressure"

Campaign against Iran, which includes efforts to reduce its oil exports to zero to prevent Tehran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

The campaign began during Trump's second term in 2018. It led to a dramatic drop in Iranian oil imports, which fell to as low as 200,000 barrels a day in certain months of 2020.

The Iranian oil exports have risen to around 1.5 million barrels a day under the administration of U.S. president Joe Biden, with most of them going to China.

Paknejad told the state television on Wednesday, that Tehran has prepared strategies in case of U.S. sanctions.

Paknejad stated that the upstream investment issue was the biggest challenge facing the global oil markets in the medium- to long-term.

He said that if today, some major oil users are worried about the oil supply, it is because they have put pressure on OPEC+ by pushing for regulations on new upstream investment and by putting political pressure on OPEC+.

Paknejad, who was elected as the president of OPEC for 2025 in December, is a member of the OPEC. Reporting by Dubai Newsroom Editing Bernadettebaum and Gareth Jones

(source: Reuters)