The United States says it wants a diplomatic solution to its dispute over Iran’s nuclear program but has not ruled out military action if that fails. Tehran has threatened to impose controls on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz if attacked.
Yesterday, Iran said it had tested a new weapon for use at sea. Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, the commander of the Revolutionary Guards, claimed the new marine weapon is “unique in the world” and has a range of 300 km. Iranian state radio called it a missile.
Kuwait, the world’s seventh-largest oil exporter, ships all of its crude exports, totaling around 1.7 million barrels per day, through the strait. It has no alternative export route.
Kuwait is assessing plans to set up storage facilities in Asian countries such as China and Vietnam where it is building refineries, industry and diplomatic sources said.
“Storing oil there is one of the option beings considered,” said a senior Western diplomat. “But it is a very long-term plan as the refineries haven’t been built yet.”
In April, Vietnam signed a deal with Kuwait and several Japanese companies to set up a $ 6 billion refinery with a capacity of 200,000 barrels per day which is scheduled to go online in five years.
In China, Kuwait has short-listed Royal Dutch Shell and Dow Chemical Co. as potential partners in a joint venture refinery and petrochemical project with Sinopec in south China that is now undergoing feasibility studies. Demand for joint stockpiling in Asia is growing as emerging economies such as China look to secure their future energy supplies. The world’s second-largest oil consumer China has started to build strategic stocks and plans to have capacity for around 100 million barrels by the end of this year.
Kuwait already has a joint storage deal for 2 million barrels of its crude in South Korea. The agreement gives South Korea first rights to purchase the oil from state-run Kuwait Petroleum Corp.
The head of top state oil firm Kuwait Petroleum Corp (KPC), Saad Al-Shuwaib, said in June Kuwait was developing precautionary plans with other Gulf states to continue exports if Iran closes the strait. He gave no further details.
In addition to the crude exports, Kuwait ships around 700,000 bpd of refined oil products, Washington-based consultancy PFC Energy estimates.
In Parliament, deputies have been calling on the government to prepare for the possibility of a military conflict. “The government must take (Iranian) threats seriously and take precautionary measures… We ask the government to be prepared for any emergency,” MP Mekhled Al-Azmi told Reuters recently.
Oil Minister Mohammad Al-Olaim has repeatedly declined to discuss any such plans, echoing comments by other government officials they were optimistic there would be no military conflict between Iran and the West.
“That’s the best they can hope for, and pray because they don’t have many options,” said a Western oil executive in Kuwait.
Iran’s official news agency IRNA quoted Gen. Jafari as saying that in the event of a possible strike on Iran, the country would respond in every way it could. The enemy, he said, would prefer to make the duration of the war as short as possible. But, “we will prolong it,” Jafari said.