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Iran to cut fuel imports as sanctions loom
Published Date: April 20, 2010 


TEHRAN: A planned hike in gasoline prices will cut consumption and reduce 
Iran's dependence on imported fuel, a senior official said yesterday, 
dismissing the threat of more international sanctions on the Islamic state. 
Iran is the world's fifth biggest crude exporter but US sanctions mean it has 
suffered from lack of investment in refineries, forcing the OPEC member to 
import 40 percent of its gasoline needs.

Commerce Minister Mehdi Ghazanfari said a plan to reform Iran's costly subsidy 
system, under which energy and food subsidies would be phased out over five 
years, would increase domestic gasoline prices. "This will affect consumption 
and lower dependence on foreign imports," he told a news conference, adding 
that Iran was also increasing its own production.

With the United States pushing for a fourth round of UN sanctions on Iran over 
its nuclear work, several of the world's top oil firms and trading houses have 
already curbed fuel sales to pre-empt potential penalization of their US 
operations. On Thursday, Malaysia's Petronas said it had stopped supplying 
gasoline to Iran, joining a growing list of companies taking similar action. 
Such pullouts may allow oil firms from China, which wants to maintain economic 
ties with Tehran, to strengthen their position in
Iran. Iran bought around 128,000 barrels per day (bpd) of gasoline in March, 
steady with imports the previous month, according to traders.

'DEFEATED'
Iranian motorists now pay just 1,000 rials (about 10 US cents) per liter of 
gasoline, for amounts of up to 80 litres per month. Above that level, they pay 
4,000 rials. Low prices have encouraged demand and forced the country to import 
large quantities of gasoline, burdening the state budget and making it 
potentially vulnerable to any measures targeting such trade. Iranian leaders 
have repeatedly shrugged off the impact of sanctions imposed over nuclear work 
the West fears is aimed at making bombs, but anal
ysts say they are hurting the economy by deterring foreign investors and 
pushing up trade costs. Iran says its nuclear program is aimed at generating 
electricity.

A US sanctions draft proposes new curbs on Iranian banking, a full arms 
embargo, tougher measures against Iranian shipping, moves against members of 
Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and firms they control and a ban on 
new investments in Iran's energy sector. While Washington hopes the UN Security 
Council will approve the sanctions in the coming weeks, Iranian President 
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said he will not beg to avoid them and that they do not 
pose a huge risk to the country's economy.

The economic sanction process is a defeated one," Ghazanfari said. "Almost the 
entire world is after market ... and Iran has one of the biggest markets in the 
world," he said. Any sanction targeting Iran's oil sales would also be 
"ineffective," the minister said. "Because it is the Western countries that 
depend on oil for their livelihood ... they would actually be helping the 
Islamic state to preserve its oil for future generations," Ghazanfari said. - 
Reuters

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