According to Iranian counter-smuggling authorities, 17 percent of daily fuel production equivalent to some 40 million liters (10.6 million US gallons) were being smuggled out of the country every day in 2009. This is while most of the smuggling concerns
gasoline and
diesel fuel, whereas Iran imports both of these to the tune of 30 million liters (7.9 million US gallons) every day. Smugglers are using "lakes of fuel", underground pipelines to neighboring countries and oil tankers on the
Shatt al-Arab waterway. Facilities such as
the Martyr Rajai Port Complex in
Hormuzgan province are reportedly used by the
IRGC to export state subsidized gasoline outside the country. Fuel smuggling has increased by 232 percent compared to last year's figures. Iran says its naval security forces have confiscated ten oil tankers smuggling 4,600 tons of Iranian fuel out of the Persian Gulf in 2008. As of 2012, smuggling to
Pakistan and
Afghanistan continues unabated because of price differential with these countries and because of the steep devaluation of the
Iranian rial.
Economic damage Iranian taxpayers incur a loss of $3.3 billion annually because of fuel smuggling (& not including other smuggled oil derivatives), equivalent to the "
development budget" of Iran. According to National Police Chief Esmaeil Ahmadi-Moqaddam, before the implementation of the
subsidy reform plan, 20 million liters of fuel were trafficked out of the country. Twenty million liters of fuel is still trafficked out of Iran every year despite initial increased domestic fuel prices caused by the
Iranian targeted subsidy plan. Over the past three years (2010–13), 8-10 million liters of gasoline has been produced per day by
the domestic petrochemical units. Iran decided inexplicably to abandon the
Iranian subsidy reform plan after 2014, this in contravention of the goal to stop fuel smuggling with neighboring countries because of the very large price differentials therein. ==Immediate reactions to gas rationing plan==