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Adani Unit Agrees to $275 Million Settlement Over US Sanctions Violations Linked to Iranian LPG Imports

By MGN EditorialMay 19, 2026 at 12:00 PM

An Adani Enterprises subsidiary has agreed to pay $275 million to settle a US Treasury investigation into 32 apparent violations of American sanctions against Iran, with the case centred on LPG import activity.

An Adani Enterprises Limited subsidiary has agreed to pay $275 million to resolve a US government investigation into alleged violations of American sanctions targeting Iran, the Treasury Department announced on Monday. According to Splash247, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) determined that the settlement covers 32 apparent violations connected to liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) imports. The case represents one of the more significant sanctions enforcement actions to involve a major Asian conglomerate in recent years and underscores the extraterritorial reach of US sanctions law across global commodity supply chains. OFAC administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions based on US foreign policy and national security goals, and has increasingly pursued enforcement actions against entities operating outside the United States that conduct transactions involving sanctioned jurisdictions, including Iran. The settlement is notable for the maritime and energy sectors, as LPG trade is a key segment of the global gas shipping market. Transactions involving Iranian-origin LPG cargoes — regardless of where they are processed or re-exported — can trigger OFAC liability for any party with a US nexus, including those using US-dollar clearing, US-flagged vessels, or American financial institutions. Adani Enterprises is one of India's largest conglomerates, with significant interests spanning ports, logistics, energy, and commodities. The group has faced heightened scrutiny from US regulators and investors in recent periods, and this settlement adds to the compliance challenges confronting the business. The $275 million figure reflects the scale of the alleged violations and serves as a reminder to commodity traders, shipowners, and charterers of the compliance risks associated with Iranian energy trade. Industry legal experts have long cautioned that even indirect exposure to sanctioned cargoes — through ship-to-ship transfers, flag-of-convenience vessels, or opaque ownership structures — can result in substantial penalties. The settlement does not constitute an admission of liability by Adani under standard OFAC resolution terms. Companies that self-disclose violations and demonstrate robust compliance programmes typically receive more favourable treatment in penalty calculations. For the broader maritime industry, the case reinforces the importance of rigorous due diligence on cargo origins, counterparty screening, and vessel vetting — particularly in the LPG and broader gas tanker segment where Iranian volumes have historically sought to enter global markets through intermediary channels.

Source: Splash247

#OFAC sanctions#LPG shipping#Iran sanctions#Adani Enterprises#sanctions compliance#US Treasury#gas tankers#maritime compliance

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