A draft agreement between the United States and Iran, seen by this correspondent, outlines a phased lifting of sanctions in exchange for verifiable nuclear rollbacks. The British Treasury has initiated an urgent audit of financial channels to assess sanctions-evasion risks, signalling deep unease in London over potential capital flight via shell companies and cryptocurrency networks. The deal's architecture borrows from the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action but tightens loopholes: enrichment levels are capped at 3.
67 per cent, and advanced centrifuges must be decommissioned under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) supervision within six months. However, the Treasury's internal memorandum, marked 'sensitive', warns that Iran's network of front companies in Turkey, the UAE, and Southeast Asia could reroute petrodollars into European real estate and shadow banking. Senior Whitehall sources confirm that the audit will focus on real-time transaction monitoring for oil sales, a sector where Iran has historically used ship-to-ship transfers and falsified cargo manifests.
The stakes are thermodynamic. A single unmonitored barrel of Iranian crude, combusted as petrol, releases roughly 430 kilograms of carbon dioxide. If even a fraction of the proposed 500,000 barrels per day export quota leaks past sanctions, the global carbon budget tightens further.
Meanwhile, Tehran's negotiators insist on guaranteed access to the SWIFT messaging system, a demand the US Treasury has so far resisted. The clock is ticking. IAEA inspectors report that Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium now stands at 18 times the permissible limit under the original deal.
Calm urgency dictates that any agreement must be watertight; the alternative is a cascade of decarbonisation delays and geopolitical rupture.









