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  • Bahrain mulling gas deal with Iran, Qatar: report

    zawya

    Bahrain mulling gas deal with Iran, Qatar: report

    02 August 2004

    Tehran -- Bahrain plans to sign agreements with Iran and Qatar next year for
    the purchase of gas, a Bahraini press report said, citing a finance ministry
    official.

    The projects involve pipe laying under the Persian Gulf, which is expected
    to finish by 2009, Bahrain Tribune said on its website, quoting
    Undersecretary for Finance and National Economy, Shaikh Ibrahim bin Khalifa
    al-Khalifa.

    It put the cost of the projects at one billion Bahraini dinars. Shaikh
    Ibrahim said talks with Iran and Qatar were `progressing smoothly and would
    be completed by the year-end`, Bahrain Tribune said.

    It said, "Iran has affirmed its keenness to take part in the joint
    investment project and provide investment options."

    The Itar-Tass news agency said last month that Iran had begun building a
    140-km-long gas pipeline to Armenia. It said the two countries had signed an
    agreement on the project worth around 120 million US dollars in May, when
    Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh visited Yerevan.

    Under its provisions, Iran will be supplying 36 billion cubic meters of
    natural gas to Armenia annually from 2007 through 2027. Itar-Tass, citing
    OPEC sources in Vienna, said that the pipeline might be used to ship Iranian
    gas to Georgia, Ukraine and farther on to Europe in the future.

    Tehran has already a multi-billion-dollar contract with neighboring Turkey
    to supply gas for 25 years. The gas flow was launched in December 2001 via a
    2,577-kilometer pipeline, running from the northeastern city of Tabriz to
    Ankara, which supplies gas from southern Iran near the Persian Gulf.

    The contract has been a boon to Iran`s bid to become a sustainable gas
    supplier to Turkey and Europe.

    Looking for alternative markets, Tehran has held talks with the Persian Gulf
    littoral states and the Central Asian nations for the sale of gas.

    The country sits on the second largest proven gas reserves of the world
    after Russia, which has been a headache for Iran by getting into, what is
    feared to be, an unnecessary and costly competition.

    © IRNA 2004
    Article originally published by IRNA 02-Aug-04

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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