Iran's state oil refining and gas companies cannot afford the
multi-billion dollar monthly cash payments to households demanded of them as
part of government subsidy “reforms” pushed by Ahmadinejad, the Iranian oil
minister said today.
In late 2010, Ahmadinejad administration began slashing subsidies on a
range of fuels in order to reduce demand and costly fuel imports. But to soften
the blow of higher consumer energy prices, the government set up a system of
cash payments to households, which amounted to billions of dollars each month.
That cash payment, which comes out of the oil ministry budget, is what the oil
minister was referring to. It is practically bankrupting state-owned refining
and natural gas entities.
“It leaves us nothing to invest in vital projects,” Bijan Zanganeh, Iran’s oil minister, said today. (SHANA, 27 October)
“It leaves us nothing to invest in vital projects,” Bijan Zanganeh, Iran’s oil minister, said today. (SHANA, 27 October)
Zanganeh, said the National Iranian Gas Company (NIGC) and National
Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company (NIORDC) are required under the
current annual budget to pay 270 trillion rials (about $9 billion in free
market exchange rate, or $23 billion in official rate) in cash to Iranian
citizens as compensation for higher fuel bills.
“We have to sell crude oil in order to be able to deposit the necessary
resources into Treasury,” Zanganeh said. “But we cannot afford it,” he added.
(SHANA, 27 October)
Zanganeh made the comments on the sidelines of a conference in Tehran, emphasizing
that NIGC and NIORDC would spend all their revenues on the handouts and have
nothing left to invest in projects.
Zanganeh said in early October the government was preparing another
increase in energy prices to lighten the subsidy burden on the government.
Workers should go on strike.
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