OFAC General License X: A Narrow Window Has Opened in Iran’s Oil Trade — Here Is What It Actually Means

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By Gerald YeeDirector, Titanium Law Chambers LLC | Shipping, Trade & Marine Insurance

A separate piece on broader marine insurance trends in 1H 2026 is also up this week — this is a focused alert on a live development that dropped three days ago and is already generating questions from clients.

On 22 June 2026, OFAC issued General License X — a time-limited authorisation permitting transactions ordinarily incident to the production, sale, delivery, and offloading of Iranian-origin crude oil, petrochemical, and petroleum products. The window closes on 21 August 2026.

I want to be direct about what this is and what it is not. GL X is not a sanctions lift. It is a corridor — narrow, time-bound, and surrounded on all sides by exclusions that remain fully in force. For Singapore’s shipping and trading community, the risk of misreading it is at least as significant as the opportunity it creates.

Here is my read on the key issues.

What GL X Actually Authorises

The licence covers a broader range of ancillary activities than many will expect:

  • Production, sale, delivery, and offloading of Iranian-origin oil and petroleum products
  • Vessel management, crewing, bunkering, insurance, port services, emergency repairs, and environmental mitigation
  • USD-denominated payments to Iran, the Government of Iran, or blocked persons — where directly connected to authorised transactions
  • Importation of Iranian-origin petroleum products into the US, if incident to authorised sales or deliveries
  • Even ordinarily blocked vessels may be involved — provided their involvement is tied to an authorised activity

That last point is significant and will catch people out. A vessel that would otherwise be off-limits can participate — but only if the nexus to GL X is clear and documented. The burden of establishing that nexus will fall on the party relying on the licence.

Where the Walls Still Stand

GL X does not touch several critical areas that Singapore market participants need to keep front of mind:

  • EU and UK sanctions remain fully operative. OFAC’s authorisation does not extend to counterparties, banks, or insurers operating under European regulatory frameworks. For transactions involving EU or UK-nexus parties, the GL X window may be irrelevant.
  • North Korea, Cuba, and Crimea are untouched. Separate executive orders govern these jurisdictions. GL X confers no authority there.
  • Broader Iran sanctions architecture remains intact. This is a targeted, temporary carve-out — not a policy reset.
The Shipping and Insurance Implications

From where I sit, the immediate pressure points are practical rather than theoretical.

Charterparties and sale contracts drafted before GL X will not automatically accommodate it. War-risk clauses, sanctions exclusions, and force majeure triggers need to be reviewed against GL X’s specific scope. A vessel performing a GL X-authorised voyage that crosses into a zone caught by a pre-existing war-risk carve-out may find its owner and charterer in dispute about who bears the premium or the risk.

Marine insurers will not simply wave through GL X transactions. The short window — less than 60 days — means underwriters will require enhanced documentation: routing protocols, compliance sign-offs, real-time transaction records. Insurers who declined cover on Iranian-nexus cargoes last month will not automatically reverse that position; each case will need to be argued on its merits under the new authorisation.

Trade finance banks face secondary sanctions exposure regardless of OFAC’s authorisation if their own regulatory framework — particularly for USD clearing — has not caught up. Expect rigorous due diligence requirements and, in some cases, banks simply sitting this window out.

Three Things to Do Before the Window Closes
  1. Review your existing contracts now. Do not assume GL X creates a green light across the board. Identify specific clauses in charterparties, sale contracts, and insurance policies that were drafted in a full-sanctions environment and assess whether they need to be amended or supplemented for GL X-covered transactions.
  2. Build your compliance file in real time. The 59-day window will pass quickly. Every transaction touching GL X should be documented contemporaneously — from the initial commercial decision through to delivery. This is the file that will

    matter if an insurer raises a sanctions defence or a regulator comes knocking after 21 August.

  3. Do not conflate OFAC authorisation with universal clearance. Check your counterparties’ own regulatory exposure — EU banks, UK insurers, and non-US entities may remain restricted regardless of what GL X permits on the US side.

GL X is a genuine, if fleeting, development for participants in Iranian oil trade. But the compliance architecture around it is dense, the exclusions are real, and the timeline is unforgiving. If you are trying to assess whether a specific transaction or voyage falls within the authorised corridor — or whether your existing contracts and insurance cover need to be revisited — the team at Titanium Law Chambers LLC is ready to work through it with you.

Gerald Yee

Gerald Yee

Director, Titanium Law Chambers LLC
Advocate & Solicitor, Singapore — Shipping, Trade & Marine Insurance. Gerald advises shipowners, cargo interests, insurers, and traders on contentious and non-contentious marine insurance, charterparty, and sanctions matters.

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