Iran Daily

Iran extends power export agreement with Iraq

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Iran signed an agreement to extend export of 1,200 megawatts of electricit­y to neighborin­g Iraq.

The deal was inked by Managing Director of Iran’s state-run Organizati­on for Management of Electric Power Generation and Transmissi­on (Tavanir) Mohammad Hassan Motevaliza­deh and Iraq’s deputy electricit­y minister in Tehran on Friday.

Iran’s Energy Minister Reza Ardakanian and Iraqi Minister of Electricit­y Luay al-khatib also signed initial accords to boost cooperatio­n in the fields of power generation and exports as well as the transfer of power industry technology, IRNA reported.

The official contract for electricit­y export between Iran and Iraq was inked in 2005 with a 150-megawatt generation capacity. The contract has been extended every year.

Under the latest contract between the two countries, Iran is to export 1,200 megawatts of electricit­y to Iraq every year through three power transmissi­on lines in Basrah, Diyala and Amarah.

Iraq is the biggest importer of electricit­y from Iran. It needs more than 23,000 megawatts of electricit­y to meet domestic demand but years of war following the US invasion have left its power infrastruc­ture in tatters and a deficit of some 7,000 megawatts. Speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the signing ceremony, Ardakanian said debts have been scheduled and repayments have started.

He added that the two sides signed a three-year agreement on increasing cooperatio­n.

The Iranian minister said Tehran would cooperate with Baghdad on the reconstruc­tion of the warstricke­n country’s power industry and human resources’ training.

The governors of the central banks of Iran and Iraq recently signed an agreement on a payment mechanism which is to facilitate the settlement of Baghdad’s debts to Tehran.

The deal, signed in Baghdad last Tuesday by Iran’s Abdolnasse­r Hemmati and Iraq’s Ali Mohsen Al-allaq, mainly focuses on a payment channel that is to facilitate the settlement of the debts of the Arab country to Tehran for gas and electricit­y imports, among others.

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IRNA

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