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We can keep gas if price not right, Iran tells UAE

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  • We can keep gas if price not right, Iran tells UAE

    ArabianBusiness.com, United Arab Emirates

    Sunday, 28 September 2008

    We can keep gas if price not right, Iran tells UAE

    by Hashem Kalantari
    Saturday, 27 September 2008

    PRICE WRANGLE: Iran's oil minister Gholamhossein Nozari (pictured).
    (Getty Images) Iran said on Saturday it would sell gas to Crescent
    Petroleum of the United Arab Emirates if the price previously agreed
    was raised but is building facilities so it could use the fuel at home
    if not.

    Oil Minister Gholamhossein Nozari also told Fars News Agency a
    Pakistani team would visit Iran in days for talks on another gas
    export project that has been under discussion for years.

    Iran, the world's fourth largest oil exporter, has been slow to
    develop gas exports despite huge reserves partly because US sanctions
    have hindered the building of plants to make liquefied natural gas
    (LNG) for shipment. Iran now relies on pipelines.

    Asked about the Crescent deal, the minister said: "If the price in
    this contract is corrected, the export of gas will go
    through. Otherwise the gas from the Siri region will be transferred
    via a 32-inch, 270-km long pipeline under construction now from
    Assalouyeh to the country's interior."

    Siri is an offshore area of the Gulf near the Salman gas field that
    will supply Crescent if a deal is agreed. Assalouyeh is the capital of
    Iran's gas industry on the Gulf coast.

    The Crescent deal was initially signed in 2001 but hydrocarbon prices
    have soared since then.

    Pricing has also delayed a deal to build a gas pipeline to Pakistan
    and on to India, although testy relations between the Pakistani and
    Indian governments have also held up talks.

    "In the course of the next two days a Pakistani team will come to
    Tehran to follow up on negotiations," Nozari said.

    "Iran's proposal in the... pipeline is attaining a formula wherein the
    final sale price to Pakistan would be set a year before delivery," he
    added.

    Iran exports gas to Turkey and has a deal to sell 3 million cubic
    metres of gas per day to neighbouring Armenia in return for
    electricity.

    An Iranian official said this year the Armenian deal would come into
    effect in October but said this depended on Armenia.

    "We have completed the project on our part and we are fully prepared
    to launch exports. It is Armenia's problem, as it lacks readiness to
    receive gas at its end," Nozari said.

    Iran also imports gas from Turkmenistan, to its northeast, so it can
    supply a region of Iran that is difficult to reach from its national
    pipeline grid and gas fields in the south.

    Turkmenistan cut gas supplies to Iran last winter, a move Iranian
    officials said at the time was because it wanted a higher
    price. Supplies have since resumed but the two sides are still
    discussing pricing.

    "The gas price from Turkmenistan must be based on a win-win agreement
    as both their resources must be preserved and our purchase should have
    economic justification," Nozari said. (Reuters)
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