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30 Jun 2010
Iran sees no risks to its gasoline imports, an oil official said on Tuesday, a day after France's Total joined the list of Western oil companies stopping sales to Iran due to sanctions.
The head of the National Iranian Oil Products Distribution Company told
the oil ministry website SHANA that consumption was declining, helping
trim Iran's reliance on gasoline imports.
"Under any conditions we are able to supply the country's gasoline needs
and there is no problem in producing or importing gasoline," said Farid
Ameri, sharing the optimism of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who has
dismissed the sanctions threat.
The world's fifth-largest oil producer lacks sufficient refining
capacity and imports up to 40 percent of its gasoline needs -- making it
potentially vulnerable to sanctions which the West is pushing to
squeeze Iran over its nuclear programme.
Ahmadinejad said on Monday Iran could become self-sufficient in gasoline
"within one week" if necessary.
As well as attempting to increase domestic refinery output, Iran is
trying to reduce demand -- a policy that will be intensified later this
year when a major phase-out of government subsidies begins.
Last week, the U.S. Congress approved unilateral measures that went far
beyond the latest wave of U.N. sanctions -- including penalties for
companies supplying Iran with gasoline.
Iran says its uranium enrichment programme is entirely peaceful and that
it is not seeking a nuclear bomb.
Ameri said average daily gasoline consumption in the first three months
of this year was 62.8 million litres (13.81 million Imp gallons), down
from 64.4 million year-on-year. Average daily domestic production was
44.6 million litres, he said.
Ameri also said Iran's stocks of gasoline were up 500 million litres in
the period March 21 to June 2, compared with the same period a year ago.
He did not disclose Iran's total stock levels.
GAS FROM TURKMENISTAN
In separate comments, an energy official said Iran was signing a
contract with Turkmenistan to increase its annual imports of natural gas
from its northern neighbour to 14 billion cubic metres from 8 billion
previously.
Although it has the world's second-largest natural gas reserves, after
Russia, Iran has so far been unable to exploit the resource to become a
net exporter.
Javad Oji, head of the National Iranian Gas Company, said a pipeline
under construction to export gas to Pakistan could transport more than
first agreed. Talks under way could see Pakistan buying 30 million cubic
metres per day, rather than the 21.5 million foreseen in existing
agreements, he said.
Pakistan's position on sanctions has wavered, but on June 22 Prime
Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani said it was "not bound to follow" U.S. moves.
Source: Reuters