You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran gets 60 pct of oil income in non-USD
2007-03-23
TEHERAN - Iran, embroiled in a nuclear row with Washington, is asking more clients to pay for oil in currencies other than the dollar and 60 percent or more of its crude income is in other units, an official said on Thursday. Hojjatollah Ghanimifard, international affairs director of state-owned National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC), told Reuters almost all of IranÂ’s European clients and some of its Asian customers had accepted making payments in non-dollar currencies.

He said Iran, which has pushed for payment in euros and other currencies since September when Washington slapped sanctions on a big Iranian bank, was concerned about the weak state of the greenback and not being prompted by politics. “To the best of my knowledge, what we are doing at NIOC is purely something based on commercial reasons,” he said. “Part (of this) has to do with the strength of the dollar.”

Ghanimifard had said in December that about 57 percent of Iran’s income from crude exports was in euros. "We have asked our clients that whenever they are ready to exchange the dollar into any other currency, including the euro, we would be welcoming that. In Europe, almost -- I can say -- all have accepted, in Asian markets some,” he said.

Asked how much of Iran’s oil income was now being paid in currencies other than the dollar, he said: “It would be something close to 60 to 60 something percent.”

But he said payments were still based on dollar pricing. “Pricing as you know is based on the quotations that we get from the international market and when the international market quotes anything for crude or for the products all of them are for the US dollar,” Ghanimifard said.

IranÂ’s central bank told Reuters in February that Teheran had started pushing for a shift out of dollar oil payments after the United States imposed sanctions on Bank Saderat in September. Washington later imposed sanctions on a second bank. The central bank said the shift in payments had hastened the decline in the dollar portion of IranÂ’s foreign reserves, which account for less than 30 percent. Iran is expected to earn more than $50 billion from its energy exports in the Iranian year that ended on March 20.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  the dollar doing the classic rope a dope.

When events dictate the dollar will rise rapidly, all these "other currencies in hand will become near worthless and the buying power of the iranian state will have weakened even more than it is.

iran has a leadership crisis which wont be resolved because the two factions communists and mullah are independent control units with no ability to take input from anyone....hence failure is inevitable.
Posted by: Chater Bucket4360   2007-03-23 08:09  

#4  Of oily bourse yea, but a better course would be to press Iran into an Oil Tontine with us, then before they wise up we disappear the key Iranian participants. sure not very nice but hey the A$$atollahs aren't either.
Posted by: RD   2007-03-23 07:18  

#3  That's why we went to war with Japan. They were trying to set up a non US denominated oil bourse (memo to self, google conspiracy bourse black lace) and forced Roosenfiend to set up the attack on Pearl.

/autoClippy test.
Posted by: Shipman   2007-03-23 00:42  

#2  Russians, etc insist on payment in dollars. That is why they abandoned projects in the Ayatollah tyranny. Iran's mullahs are about ready for plucking.
Posted by: Sneaze   2007-03-23 00:13  

#1  Which may explain reports why Iran is allegedly now suffering from high rates of nationwide inflation.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-03-23 00:12  

00:00