Navios Maritime

Shipping
Greece
Navios

According to its Annual report filed with the SEC for fiscal year 2012: "Three VLCC, vessels owned by the Company and chartered to Dalian Ocean Shipping Co. (“DOSCO”) and one VLCC vessel owned by the Company and chartered to Formosa Petrochemical Corporation of Taiwan (“FPCT”), made port calls to Iran during 2012 for a combined length of approximately 15 days for the transportation of crude oil from Iran to China and Taiwan. The shipper of the cargo in all cases was National Iranian Oil Company (“NIOC”), and the recipients of the cargoes were, respectively, Unipec Asia Company Limited, HK Intertrade Company Limited, and Formosa Petrochemical. Exchange Act Section 13(r)(1)(D)(iii) requires disclosure in an issuer’s annual or quarterly report, as applicable, if, during the period covered by the report, the Company or any of its affiliates knowingly conducted any transaction or dealing with any person or entity identified under Section 560.304 of title 31, Code of Federal Regulations (relating to the definition of the Government of Iran) without the specific authorization of a U.S. Federal department or agency. NIOC is an entity identified as the Government of Iran under the cited provision. Neither the Company, nor, to the knowledge of the Company, DOSCO and FPCT had any contact or dealings with the government of Iran or affiliates of the government of Iran in connection with these port calls, other than receiving cargo owned by NIOC.

The foregoing contacts were limited to a routine acceptance and loading of cargo for the benefit of DOSCO and FPCT while the vessels were on charter to and under complete operational control of DOSCO and FPCT. Although NIOC was an entity whose name appeared on the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control’s List of Blocked Persons and Specially Designated Nationals at the time of the port calls, the purchase and lifting of crude oil shipped by that entity, did not constitute prohibited activity by the Company as a non-U.S. person, and as such, this did not have any legal compliance consequence for the Company as a non-U.S. person and to the Company’s transactions, which had no U.S. nexus. The acceptance and transportation of the crude oil to China also did not constitute sanctionable activity under U.S. Iran sanctions laws.

The Company’s aggregate gross revenues attributable to these 15 days of port calls was approximately $0.7 million. In light of the immaterial amount of port calls associated with these activities, the Company has not attributed any profits to these activities. Since May 2012, the Company’s vessels performed no voyages involving calls to Iran. Notwithstanding the foregoing, there can be no assurance that one or more charterers of the Company will not at any future time perform voyages which, if so performed, would require disclosure pursuant to Exchange Act Section 13(r)."