Analysis-Rising oil prices buy Iran time in nuclear talks, officials say
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[May 05, 2022] By
Parisa Hafezi
DUBAI (Reuters) - Emboldened by an oil
price surge since Russia invaded Ukraine, Iran's clerical rulers are in
no rush to revive a 2015 nuclear pact with world powers to ease
sanctions on its energy-reliant economy, three officials familiar with
Tehran's thinking said.
Last year, the Islamic Republic engaged in indirect talks with the
United States as a route to cancelling U.S. sanctions that have gutted
revenues and dramatically worsened economic hardships for ordinary
people, stirring discontent.
But the talks have been on hold since March, chiefly over Iran's
insistence on Washington removing the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
(IRGC), Tehran's elite security force, from the U.S. Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO) list.
While the ultimate aim is still to resurrect the deal and so have
sanctions lifted, the Iranian officials said soaring oil prices had
opened a window of opportunity for Iran by increasing revenues, giving
the economy months of breathing space.
"Our nuclear programme is advancing as planned and time is on our side,"
said a senior Iranian official, who declined to be named because he was
not authorised to discuss sensitive policy issues with the media.
"If the talks fail it will not be the end of the world," said the
official, adding that the fact Iran's economy was not now so reliant on
a revival of the deal would provide strong leverage for its negotiators
if or when the talks resumed.
Iran's foreign ministry, which handles the nuclear talks, did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
Iran's finances came under intense pressure in 2018 when then-U.S.
President Donald Trump ditched the nuclear pact between Iran and world
powers - approved by his predecessor Barack Obama - and reimposed
sanctions that sharply cut the oil revenues that fund a sprawling
Iranian state apparatus.
Oil exports from Iran, which sits on the world's fourth-largest reserves
of crude, plummeted from a peak of 2.8 million barrels per day in 2018
to as low as 200,000 bpd.
Tehran retaliated a year later by gradually violating the deal's nuclear
curbs, from rebuilding stockpiles of enriched uranium, refining it to
higher fissile purity and installing advanced centrifuges to speed up
output - reducing the time it would need to develop a nuclear bomb, if
it so chose. Tehran says it seeks only peaceful nuclear energy.
Although Iran does not divulge exact figures on oil sales, an Iranian
oil official said they were currently around 1.5 million bpd with most
going to China with a big discount that Iranian authorities have
declined to reveal.
Global crude prices remain high, however, with Brent crude reaching $139
a barrel in March, its highest since 2008 after Russia's invasion of
Ukraine exacerbated supply concerns.
The Iranian parliament increased the ceiling of oil and condensates
exports from 1.2 million bpd at a price of $60 last year to 1.4 million
bpd based on $70 a barrel in the state budget, Iranian state media
reported in March.
REVENUE HIKE
Tehran's refusal to back down from the FTO assignation demand has raised
doubt about whether the nuclear impasse can be resolved. President Joe
Biden's administration has made it clear that it has no such plans,
while also not ruling it out.
Iranian authorities have publicly shrugged off U.S. pressure, saying
Tehran has become adept at working around sanctions as they have been a
fact of life for decades.
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Iranians walk in a market in Tehran, Iran May 1, 2022. Majid
Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS
Jihad Azour, the International Monetary Fund's (IMF)
Middle East and Central Asia Department director, said the Iranian
economy had adjusted to sanctions over the last few years.
"And the increase in oil prices and an increase in
(Iran's) oil production are constituting an additional, I would say,
increase in revenues," Azour told Reuters.
However, Henry Rome, Iran analyst at consultancy group Eurasia, said
the Islamic Republic is underestimating the value of easing
sanctions and overestimating its ability to muddle through longer
term.
"Iranian leaders probably consider stronger domestic economic
performance, limited U.S. enforcement of oil sanctions and broader
Western distraction given the Ukraine war as reasons not to be
desperate to secure a deal," Rome said.
"Although, they likely remain open to a deal at the right price."
Despite the recent rise in revenues, sanctions continue to have a
major impact on daily life in Iran, meaning that everyone from the
business elite to lower-income families face soaring inflation, a
sinking currency and rising joblessness.
Clerical rulers may therefore be wary of simmering disenchantment at
home, according to a former Iranian government official.
Ultimately, they prefer an end to sanctions, fearing a return of
unrest among lower-income Iranians whose periodic protests in recent
years have reminded leaders how vulnerable they can be to grassroots
anger over economic hardship.
Not enough people are yet feeling the benefits of rising oil
revenues, the former government official added.
Iranian analyst Saeed Leylaz said Iran's home-grown economic
problems, including mismanagement and corruption that deplete
revenue needed for investment, job creation and development, pose a
bigger challenge to the establishment than sanctions.
The official inflation rate is around 40% while some people estimate
it at over 50%. Almost half of Iran's 82 million population are now
below the poverty line. Unofficial estimates suggest unemployment is
well above the official rate of 11%.
"All the economic indicators point to worsening economic realities
in Iran. To say Iran sits on a tinderbox is no exaggeration," said
Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran Program at Middle East Institute.
Prices of basic goods like bread, meat and rice are increasing
daily. Iranian media frequently report layoffs and strikes by
workers who have not been paid for months, including in
government-owned factories.
Owning a home in Tehran is impossible for many. Prices have risen in
recent months by around 50% in some areas. The currency has dropped
over 70% against the U.S. dollar since 2018.
"Where is this oil revenue going? Why we do not feel any
improvement?" said teacher Mohsen Sedighi, a father-of-two in
Tehran.
(Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Mark
Heinrich)
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