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Iran says oil trade dispute with India solved

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TEHRAN: Iran said an oil trade dispute with India had been settled by changing the currency for payments, deputy oil minister Ahmad Khaledi was quoted as saying by the semi-official Fars news agency on Friday.

“By changing the currency for oil transaction between Iran and India the problem was solved,” said Khaledi. – Reuters

Iran says oil trade dispute with India solved | Business | DAWN.COM


:cheers:
 
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Iran says payments impasse with India resolved - report

(Reuters) - Iran said an Friday that an oil payments impasse with India had been resolved by changing the currency of settlement, according to its Fars news agency, which would preserve a trade in crude worth $12 billion a year.

Central bank officials from Iran and India met in Mumbai on Friday in an effort to keep the oil trade running, and forcing New Delhi to strike a delicate balance between its energy needs and its global diplomatic interests.

"By changing the currency for oil transaction between Iran and India the problem was solved," Iran's deputy oil minister, Ahmad Khaledi, was quoted as saying by the semi-official Fars.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said last week that oil trade payments to Iran could no longer be settled using a long-standing clearinghouse system run by regional central banks, and Tehran has refused to sell oil outside the old set-up.

This week, the RBI extended the move to apply to all current account transactions.

The White House, which wants governments to stop dealing with Iran because of its nuclear programme, praised the move, which came less than two months after President Barack Obama's trip to India on which he pledged to help boost New Delhi's global role.

A spokeswoman with the Indian central bank did not have an immediate comment on Friday.

"In order to not allow Americans and Europeans to create any problem, we said let's do our business in other currencies like (Emirate) dirham or (Japanese) yen," Khaledi was quoted as saying.

Indian officials and traders had been hopeful of a quick resolution to the payments row that could have disrupted about 13 percent of its oil imports and leave refiners scrambling for expensive alternative sources of crude.

"We are extremely hopeful that this impasse will be resolved shortly as Indian companies every week get crude supplies from Iran," B. Mukherjee, head of finance at state-run Hindustan Petroleum Corp, told Reuters earlier on Friday.

Other importers of Iranian crude include state-run Indian Oil Corp and Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd and privately-run Essar Oil.

U.N. sanctions on Iran do not cover oil sales.

ALTERNATIVES

India and Iran could agree to settle deals in Iran's rial or another currency such as the yen, Indian Oil Secretary S. Sundareshan suggested on Thursday.

South Korea pays for Iranian crude using the won.

Payments could also be routed through a third-country central or commercial bank.

An economy growing at about 9 percent a year has made India the world's fourth-largest importer of crude. Iran is its second largest supplier after Saudi Arabia.

Indian oil importers get 90 days credit for payment so they are covered for old transactions, but future shipments would be in jeopardy if the matter had not been resolved.

India buys about 400,000 barrels per day of Iranian crude, settling payments through the Asian Clearing Union, a system created in the 1970s by central banks in South Asia and Iran to clear trade payments between them.

Critics say the scheme is opaque to the monitoring of flows into Iranian organisations against which the United States has sanctions, as settlements are made on a net basis every two months.

Suspending Iranian imports when global crude prices are at near two-year highs and when Indian inflation is uncomfortably high would be costly for India.

India and Iran have long-standing ties but analysts say irritants and a new strategic thinking are prompting New Delhi to adopt a more nuanced and assertive policy.

New Delhi's interests are increasingly tied with the United States, and it is also mindful of Arab concerns over Iran's nuclear ambitions.

"When it comes to Iran, India can ignore pressure from the U.S. and noises from Israel, but it cannot ignore concerns from the Arab countries," said P.R. Kumaraswamy, head of West Asian studies at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University.

"In a very subtle way, India is sending a message that its closeness with Iran will not affect relations with other Middle Eastern countries."

(Writing by C.J. Kuncheria; Editing by Tony Munroe)
Iran says payments impasse with India resolved - report | Reuters
 
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it will be good to import oil in (Emirate) dirham or Iran's rial ........the dollor has been very fluctuating and put borden on import bill...

i think dealing with Iran's rial as it has less chance of appritiate in near future....
 
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it will be good to import oil in (Emirate) dirham or Iran's rial ........the dollor has been very fluctuating and put borden on import bill...

i think dealing with Iran's rial as it has less chance of appritiate in near future....

That will require a truck load of cash to be shuffled across border and you will be left with waste currency not interchangeable with any. I Think Chinese rembi makes good sense here as India can recycle the rembi in its trade with China.
 
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Good News..:cheers:

Just heard about this problem yesterday in news.I am Glad it is solved.
 
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read the atrticle first before commenting..

Yaar he is just applying his knowledge, let him apply his logic. Nothing changes if he posts 100 more such posts.

Ok smart indians you are going to trade oil in Iranian riyals..now answer the challenge

1. Where will Iranian rials come from?? because its India which needs to buy gas from Iran.??

2. If India is going to buy rials from Iran, it first needs to export good and services to Iran and accept Iran Riyal as a mode of payment..

3. If there is a deficit how will the payments be covered

4. Iran desperately needs foreign currency how will trading gas with Iran in their local currency help them in foreign reserves?? They might as well not sell you the gas.
 
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many talking had been done in past abt. oil trade with iran. let's wait for official statement. this issue is hanging for yrs now.
 
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Any news on the actual currency to be used? The reports do discuss the options of using Yen or Dirham as alternative but not concrete yet.

I feel India should go for Yen since Japan has trade surplus with us rather than going for the Dirham. Chinese RMB is also a good alternative to consider, but I doubt India will toy around with this idea.
 
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Ok smart indians you are going to trade oil in Iranian riyals..now answer the challenge

1. Where will Iranian rials come from?? because its India which needs to buy gas from Iran.??

2. If India is going to buy rials from Iran, it first needs to export good and services to Iran and accept Iran Riyal as a mode of payment..

3. If there is a deficit how will the payments be covered

4. Iran desperately needs foreign currency how will trading gas with Iran in their local currency help them in foreign reserves?? They might as well not sell you the gas.



It's just not all about Iran here. This is not a good samiratan charity in which we help the people of the country we are trading with. We are there to do business and business only. How they want the payments to be covered is our problem and we have solved it. If there is a deficit the payments can be covered through services but only then. But i don't think that is the best idea. Anyone else may be free to argue me.Why would Iran care about foreign reserves in the first place? They should focus on themselves and how to adapt to the world market. Your 4th question makes no sense at all. We are not the world bank to start helping the poor of the world just for trade. We will help the people of Iran and provide servies trade aside. You whole argument is flawed. I can clearly see you are supoorting Iranians and making a bunch of BS questions to a problem that is already solved.
 
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'Iran oil exports to India unaffected'

mdavari20110105130826403.jpg

India's Petroleum and Natural Gas Ministry says Iran's oil exports to the country will not be affected as alternative payment routes have been put in place.


"There has been no disruption in supply since [Reserve Bank of India] RBI issued new payment guidelines. A cargo for delivery on January 8 and 9 is currently being loaded in Iran and we have no problems sourcing crude from Iran," India Today quoted India's Petroleum Secretary S. Sundareshan as saying on Tuesday.

He also said that the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) is willing to accept payments from Indian oil firms through the Europaisch-Iranische Handelsbank (EIH Bank) in Hamburg, Germany.

Oil companies working with Iran like Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd (HPCL) and Mangalore Refinery and Petrochemicals Ltd (MRPL) will make payments to NIOC's EIH Bank account in Hamburg via the State Bank of India (SBI).

According to Sundareshan, the two central banks will meet in Tehran from January 14 to 16 to find a permanent solution to the matter.

Part of the meeting will involve choosing a payment currency, such as the Iranian Rial, Dirham and Yen, which are not susceptible to US pressure.

The problem arose when the Indian Central Bank said import payments to Iran would have to be settled outside the existing Asian Clearing Union (ACU) mechanism.

Under the ACU mechanism, every two months imports by the nine member-nations are settled by every member paying for its import surplus.


PressTV - 'Iran oil exports to India unaffected'
 
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india should start focusing more on electric cars and solar power.
 
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Iran Assures India Of Smooth Supply Of Oil



Iran has assured India, which buys about 400,000 barrels/day of Iranian crude, that there will be no interruption to the Iranian oil supply. Iran has earlier threatened to withhold the supply of crude to India in the wake of the latter's decision to discontinue payments through the 35-year old Asian Clearing Union (ACU) system. The Reserve Bank of India (central bank) dismantled the ACU on December 27 after the Deutsche Bundesbank (central bank) sought clarification of Euro transactions with Iran.

The ACU, based in Tehran, is an arrangement where the participants settle payments for intra-regional transactions among member central banks, helping economize the use of foreign exchange and transfer costs.

Iran has offered to accept payments through a bank based in Germany, Europaisch Iraniche Handelsbank (European-Iranian Commerce Bank), a German bank in which the central bank of Iran keeps an account.

Source: Arab News, Saudi Arabia, January 5, 2011

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