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Iran to Use 18% of Stabilization Fund for Oil, Gas Industry

Iran Materials 3 September 2012 16:43 (UTC +04:00)

Iran is to spend 18 percent of its stabilization fund for the development of the oil and gas sector, Petroleum Minister Rostam Qasemi said.

"This year [2012-2013] we are planning to use $14 billion for the development of the oil and gas industry from the stabilization fund alone," he told RIA Novosti's Mikhail Gusev, his first interview with a foreign news agency.

Iranian oil exports have fallen by an estimated 40 percent since the EU introduced an oil embargo against Tehran in July.

The National Development Fund [National Stabilization Fund] was established to protect the national economy and reduce Iran's dependence on oil, Qasemi said.

"Every year 20 percent of the country's GDP goes to the stabilization fund," he said.

Iran also has other foreign exchange reserves both at home and abroad, he added.

"So there will be no particular difficulties this year with financing the country's oil and gas industry," he said.

As of 2010, Iran's stabilization fund was $40 billion.

According to Iran's Petroleum Ministry, the Islamic Republic currently produces 4 million barrels of crude per day, half of which is exported.

The United States, Israel and a number of Western European countries suspect Iran of running a nuclear weapons program under the guise of a civil nuclear project. Iran denies this and maintains its nuclear ambitions are purely peaceful. Iran is the subject of a raft of sanctions by the U.S. and the European Union.

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