Iran
plans oil exports to North Korea
Tehran
and Pyongyang are in talks about possible exports of Iranian oil to
North Korea, Iran's oil ministry said on Saturday.
RT,
20
April, 2013
“We
have had, and continue to have, negotiations with the North Koreans
who have requested to buy Iranian oil. We are discussing the
procedure and we don't have any problem selling them oil,"
Iranian Oil Minister Rostam Qasemi told a briefing at an
International oil and gas exhibition in Tehran.
The
minister admitted that Iran was feeling the strain of sanctions
imposed on the country by foreign governments, but said it would not
get in the way of the transportation of its oil to “any country, in
any part of the world,” AP cites.
A
delegation from North Korea is among the participants of the expo in
the Iranian capital. A Tehran-Pyongyang oil deal would further
develop ties increase between the two states – which are both at
odds with the US and the West over their respective nuclear programs
and have both been sanctioned over the issue.
In
September, Iran and North Korea signed an agreement to collaborate in
the fields of science and technology. After nearly a decade of US
efforts to isolate the two states internationally, it seems they
might have actually pushed them closer together. Previously, Iranian
and North Korean officials described their countries as being in "one
trench" in the fight against the West, while Western powers
accused them of being close partners in nuclear and missile
technologies.
Last
year, to put even more pressure on Tehran to abandon its nuclear
ambitions, the EU and the US introduced sanctions, additional to the
UN Security Council’s, including an oil embargo and financial
restrictions.
According
to US Energy Information Administration, in 2012 Iran saw
“unprecedented drops in its oil exports” because of the
sanctions.
However,
Tehran boasts that despite economic sanctions, Iran overhauled its
oil industry by developing its shipping industry and expanding its
oil market.
“If
Europeans do not purchase our oil, we have also imposed sanctions on
them. We have other customers today and more than 60 countries today,
in fact, are purchasing our petrochemical and oil products and
derivatives,” Qasemi said in an interview with Iranian broadcaster
Press TV earlier in the week.
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