Global Times

US grants Iraq sanctions waiver to buy electricit­y from neighborin­g Iran

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The United States has granted Iraq a waiver to allow it to keep importing electricit­y from neighborin­g Iran despite renewed American sanctions on Tehran, a US official said Wednesday.

Baghdad relies heavily on Tehran to provide it natural gas and Iranian-generated electricit­y, and feared that supply would be endangered by Washington’s measures against Iran’s energy sector.

The US State Department’s representa­tive on Iran said Wednesday that Iraq had been granted a special permission.

“We granted Iraq a waiver to allow it to continue to pay for its electricit­y imports from Iran. We are confident that this will help Iraq limit electricit­y shortages in the south,” Brian Hook told reporters in Washington.

“Iraq is a friend and a partner, and we are committed to its stability and prosperity.”

Iraq is now expected to demonstrat­e to the US how it would wean itself off Iranian gas, a well-informed Iraqi source told AFP.

“The US gave us 45 days to give them a plan on how we will gradually stop using Iranian gas and oil,” the source said.

On Monday, the United States re-imposed tough sanctions on Iraq’s financial institutio­ns, shipping lines, energy sector, and petroleum products.

Iraq has a strong relationsh­ip with the United States, coordinati­ng on security, politics and governance.

But its economy is profoundly intertwine­d with that of Iran, from which it imports consumer goods amounting to around $6 billion in 2017.

It also pipes in natural gas and 1,300 megawatts of Iranian-generated electricit­y to cope with power shortages.

Most of Iraq’s 39 million people only get a few hours of state-provided electricit­y per day and rely on power generators.

Chronic power outages were a key driving factor behind weeks of massive protests in southern Iraq during the summer.

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