IranMajlis Speaker: Iran Doesn’t Have Oil to Deny Enemies

Majlis Speaker: Iran Doesn’t Have Oil to Deny Enemies

-

Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the Speaker of the Iranian regime’s Majlis (Parliament) indirectly referred to past threats by Iranian officials to cut oil exports to the West. Highlighting the current energy imbalance crisis in the country, he stated that Iran now lacks the oil and market leverage to threaten the world.

On November 26, Ghalibaf said during a public parliamentary session: “There was a time when, in response to enemy threats, we used to say we’d shut off the oil supply to you—it was our leverage of threat. But today, with this situation, what oil can we shut off, and what market do we have?”

He further noted that, according to Iran’s oil minister, even if production exists, the country faces a “transportation problem” for transferring oil.

Ghalibaf added: “Our issues are more complex than simply discussing now whether mazut (a type of heavy fuel oil) should be burned in power plants or not.”

Officials from Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s administration in 2012 had threatened the West that if Iran was sanctioned, it would “halt” oil exports to drive oil prices up to “$300” per barrel and create a “crisis” in the global economy.

In this context, Rostam Ghasemi, Iran’s oil minister at the time, stated in November 2012: “If you continue to increase sanctions, we will also cut off our oil exports to the world.”

He claimed: “We have prepared a contingency plan to run the country without any oil revenue.”

His threat has not been carried out in over a decade. Instead, Iran has resorted to relying on China to sell its oil, offering significant discounts in the process.

Additionally, Iran’s plan to run the country without oil revenues comes as, since November 2012, the government’s debt to the Central Bank—due to borrowing to cover budget deficits—has increased 38-fold to approximately 50 trillion rials (about $7.142 billion). Government debt to other banks is more than double this amount.

During this period, the government has also borrowed $100 billion from the National Development Fund. Overall, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), public debt has risen to one-third of Iran’s entire economy.

The Iranian regime’s past threats to disrupt the global economy by cutting off oil exports contrast sharply with its current situation. In the early 2010s, Iran exported 2.5 million barrels of oil per day, 18 billion cubic meters of gas, and 12 terawatt-hours of electricity annually. Now, it smuggles 1.6 million barrels of oil, faced a 64 billion cubic meter gas deficit last year, and has zero net electricity trade. This past summer, it also struggled with a massive electricity shortage.

Ghalibaf stated that this summer’s electricity deficit was 15,000 megawatts, and last winter’s gas shortage reached 250 million cubic meters, equivalent to 20% of the country’s total electricity and gas demand.

He added: “When consumption grows by 5.5% and production grows by only a fraction of a percent, the result is nothing but imbalance.”

The Iranian regime’s insistence on uranium enrichment to provide fuel for nuclear power plants comes while the Bushehr power plant—the country’s sole nuclear power plant—accounts for only 1% of the country’s electricity production. Over the past decade, it has produced a total of 70 terawatt-hours of electricity, worth less than $5 billion in regional markets.

Ignoring the hundreds of billions of dollars in direct costs from sanctions, the mentioned figure is even less than the construction cost of the Bushehr plant. In other words, over the past decade, the value of electricity produced by the Bushehr plant has not even equaled its construction cost.

The West accuses the Iranian regime of attempting to build a nuclear bomb—a claim the regime denies. However, it has refused to answer the International Atomic Energy Agency’s questions regarding clandestine activities and the origins of uranium particles found at undeclared sites.

Latest news

Protests Expand Across Iranian Cities, From Retirees and Workers to Students and Bakers

As the livelihood crisis, inflation, rising prices, and economic discontent continued to deepen, cities across Iran witnessed protests and...

IRGC Announces Closure of Strait of Hormuz After Firing on a Ship

While the United States had demanded that the Iranian regime confirm that the Strait of Hormuz would remain open,...

Third Round of U.S. Strikes Against Iran’s Regime After IRGC Closes Strait Of Hormuz

The United States Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that U.S. forces have launched the third round of strikes against the...

Protest Gatherings by Retirees and Steel Workers in Iran

On Saturday, July 11, a group of buyers holding purchase vouchers for vehicles from the Iranian automaker Saipa gathered...

U.S. Treasury Targets Khamenei-Linked Financial Network

The U.S. Department of the Treasury sanctioned Ali Ansari, an individual linked to a network of exchange houses and...

Sharp Increase in Bread Prices in Iran

For years in Iran, it was commonly said that even if people could no longer afford meat, chicken, dairy...

Must read

Why Iran’s economy is struggling

Daily Telegraph: The leader of Iran's Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah...

Deceptive Maneuver of Changing the Law Regarding Reduction in the Number of Executions

Iran Focus London, 2 November - In an article published...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you