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Iran works on gas sales to neighbours pending exports further afield

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  • Iran works on gas sales to neighbours pending exports further afield

    Agence France Presse
    April 26, 2004 Monday

    Iran works on gas sales to neighbours pending exports further afield

    by SIAVOSH GHAZI

    TEHRAN, April 26


    Iran, which holds some 15 percent of the world's natural gas
    reserves, is boosting exports of gas to its neighbours in the hope of
    picking up sales to Asia and Europe in the future.

    "In the short term, we are looking to export our gas to neighbouring
    countries, but we are also working on exports of liquefied natural
    gas (LNG) to Asia and Europe," said Rokneddin Javadi, director of
    Iran's National Gas Export Company.

    "The issue is that the projects to export to neighbours, such as
    those across the Persian Gulf, can be completed in two years. But an
    LNG export project needs five years," he told AFP on the sidelines of
    a gas export conference here in Tehran.

    He said Iran expects to sign within the next two weeks a contract to
    supply 15 million cubic metres (500 million cubic feet) a day by
    pipeline to the United Arab Emirates.

    And he said the Islamic republic was also in talks with Kuwait and
    the UAE for two other similar contracts, hoping to export 1.5 billion
    cubic metres to the two countries each year.

    Also expected later this year are contracts with Armenia and the
    Russian Caucasus republic of Nakhchavan, covering the sale of three
    billion cubic metres annually.

    And a 25-year contract with Turkey allowed Iran to sell 3.5 billion
    cubic metres there in 2003. That figure is expected to rise to five
    billion cubic metres in 2004, if a contractual dispute can be worked
    out.

    Turkey, complaining the gas is of poor quality, has demanded a price
    cut and has threatened to turn to Russia instead.

    "You have to ask the Turks what is going on. If they abandon the
    contract, they will have to pay a heavy fine," an Iranian industry
    official said.

    Mehmet Bigic, head of Turkey's Botas company, hinted that the deal
    was still valid: "It is not possible to quit a 25-year contract. But
    you can renegotiate."

    Despite the ongoing difficulties with Turkey, Javadi nevertheless
    said he hoped Iranian gas sales would total two billion dollars
    annually in 2010.

    But Iran is also counting on this figure jumping dramatically if it
    can get LNG exports by tanker moving further afield, notably to the
    potentially huge markets of the Indian subcontinent, China -- with
    whom a memorandum on future sales has already been inked -- and
    Europe.

    The country currently has three LNG production projects underway,
    NIOC-LNG of the National Iranian Oil Company, the Pars-LNG consortium
    of NIOC, Total and Petronas, and Persian-LNG of NIOC, Shell and
    Repsol.

    But such sales are pending the completion of LNG production
    facilities, as well as the costly laying of pipelines that need to
    cross sensitive areas such as the Pakistani-Indian border.

    Furthermore, there is tough competition from Russia, holder of the
    world's largest reserves and geographically better placed to tap the
    European and Chinese markets. Competition from Algeria and Qatar is
    also tough, and Iran has found itself lagging due to the late
    development of its gas sector.

    In the case of Qatar, the world's number-three for gas reserves has
    been quicker than Iran to tap its off-shore resources and is now
    pushing to become the world's top exporter.

    In March, Qatar signed a six billion dollar protocal accord with the
    South African-US Sasol-Chevron consortium for three LNG production
    projects. It has also already got a foot in the Indian market.

    Political pressure on Iran, including United States sanctions that
    target foreign companies investing here, are also a major hurdle.

    "These kind of investments represent billions of dollars, and it is
    not certain that international companies will accept to finance
    them," one Western industry expert here said.
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