The top US energy official said he believed the oil market could cope with any further reduction of Iran''s oil exports from the tightening of sanctions on Tehran over its nuclear programme. US Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz also said on Sunday he expected a "fair amount of action" by his department in 2013 in evaluating applications by US firms to export natural gas.
Companies hoping to ship gas abroad have been frustrated by lengthy delays and rule changes as they await Department of Energy approval of their applications. "I''m planning to go through them as rapidly as I can," Moniz said in an interview in Vienna.
As for Iran, US lawmakers are embarking this summer on a campaign to deal a deeper blow to its diminishing oil exports, and analysts say the ultimate goal could be a near total cut-off.
This could risk antagonising China and India, the biggest remaining buyers of Iranian crude, and could push oil prices higher in a hit to the global economy.
Moniz said Iranian exports were not now a "dominant player in the market", and was offset by increased production in the United States and in Iraq as well as substantial reserve capacity in some of the major Opec producers such as Saudi Arabia.
"So I would think that with further sanctions, the markets could be quite resilient to that," said Moniz, who took office last month. From a technical point of view, "we can certainly manage a further reduction of Iranian exports", he added.
US and European Union sanctions aimed at choking the flow of oil money into Iran and forcing Tehran to negotiate curbing its controversial nuclear programme slashed its crude exports to 700,000 bpd in May, the lowest in decades, according to industry sources and tanker-tracking data.
But crude prices are still lower than they were a year ago.
Iran says its nuclear programme is a peaceful bid to generate electricity. But Washington and its allies suspect Tehran is seeking the capability to make nuclear weapons.
Both parties in the US Congress are pressing for tougher sanctions, betting that a resurgence in US oil output and signs of ample global supply will prevent prices from rising.
Moniz said there was "quite a bit of potential for increased production to offset any further reduction" of Iranian exports.
"ACTION" ON GAS EXPORT APPLICATIONS
Last week, US President Barack Obama included a robust endorsement of natural gas use around the world as he sought to revive his stalled climate change agenda.
But how much the United States will supply remained unclear as more than a dozen companies await approval to sell excess gas to countries such as India and Japan, where it will fetch higher prices than in the domestic market. The Energy Department has so far approved two projects to ship liquefied natural gas (LNG).
"I''ve committed to start that process expeditiously, and I certainly expect to have substantial numbers of that (evaluation of export license applications) this year," Moniz said.