Global Times

China provides $10b credit line to Iran to finance water, energy, transport projects

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A Chinese State-owned investment firm has provided a $10 billion credit line for Iranian banks, Iran’s central bank president said on Saturday.

The contract was signed in Beijing between China’s CITIC investment group and a delegation of Iranian banks led by central bank chief Valiollah Seif.

The Iran Daily said the funds would finance water, energy and transport projects.

Iran is vital to China’s trade ambitions as it develops its trillion-dollar Belt and Road initiative aimed at boosting its ties to Europe and Africa.

In addition to the credit line, the Export-Import Bank of China committed to a further $10 billion in loans, while the China Developmen­t Bank signed preliminar­y deals with Iran for $15 billion in infrastruc­ture and production projects, Seif said.

The contracts reflect “a strong will for continuati­on of cooperatio­n between the two countries,” Seif said.

In total, China has agreed to allocate $35 billion in financing and loans for Iran’s economy, news agency IRNA quoted Seif as saying.

The credit line will use euros and yuan to help bypass US sanctions that have continued despite the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers in 2015.

China was a signatory to the deal that lifted sanctions in exchange for curbs to Iran’s nuclear program.

Although bilateral trade was $31 billion in 2016, it jumped more than 30 percent in the first six months of 2017.

China is already Iran’s biggest oil customer and accounts for a third of its overall trade.

Since the lifting of sanctions, China has opened two credit lines worth $4.2 billion to build high-speed railway lines linking Tehran with Mashhad and Isfahan, the Iran Daily reported.

The latest move follows an 8-billion-euro ($9.6 billion) credit deal signed with South Korea’s Exim bank last month.

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