Russia says oil-for-goods deal with Iran could be sealed soon

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: December 1, 2014

, ,

Moscow | Reuters — Russia hopes a deal to supply grain and equipment to Iran in return for oil can be reached soon, Russia’s Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev said Sunday.

The deal “will affect not only grain, there are broad lists of goods… We expect that (a deal) could be reached in the near future,” Ulyukayev told reporters in Tehran, according to the RIA news agency.

In January, Reuters reported Moscow and Tehran were discussing a barter deal worth up to US$20 billion that would see Moscow buy up to 500,000 barrels a day of Iranian oil in exchange for Russian equipment and goods.

Read Also

Michelle Ross is a research officer with the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Saskatchewan. She and Richard Gray, professor at the University of Saskatchewan and Canadian Grain Policy Research Chair, are working on an agronomy resources survey that measures whether farmers and agrologists are aware of free tools like the Fusarium Headblight Maps, the Prairie Pest Monitoring Network and the Test Monitoring Network. The research will help direct producer funds to future agricultural science clusters.Photo Credit: Supplied

Survey looks to gauge whether producers are aware of free agronomic tools and where producer funds are going

Survey looks to gauge whether producers are aware of free agronomic tools and where producer funds are going

Such an agreement would enable Iran to significantly raise oil exports despite sanctions over its nuclear program, and give the slowing Russian economy a much-needed boost. But it would also strain relations between Moscow and the West at a time when they are already frayed over the Ukraine crisis.

The U.S. has warned Russia an oil-for-goods deal could run counter to nuclear talks between world powers and Iran, and might fall foul of U.S. sanctions.

Russia’s economy ministry was not available for comment on Sunday, but in April Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said Moscow would observe U.N. sanctions rules for any deal with Iran, rather than the tougher ones imposed unilaterally by the U.S.

Ulyukayev did not specify a date when deliveries of grain and equipment to Iran could start, but said discussions were continuing.

He said Russia was discussing supplying Iran with equipment for the oil and gas industry, agricultural machinery, cars, planes and electric generators, among other goods.

Iran and the six powers last Monday gave themselves seven more months to resolve a standoff on Iran’s nuclear programme that has seen crippling economic sanctions imposed on Tehran, and extended the partial easing of those sanctions that followed an interim agreement.

— Reporting for Reuters by Alexander Winning in Moscow.

explore

Stories from our other publications