Iran has announced its interest in joining the Nabucco pipeline project which would bring natural gas from Central Asia into Europe.
“Although we have not received an official suggestion to join the Nabucco project, if there would be an official request, we will consider it,” Iranian Deputy Foreign Ministry Alireza Sheikh Attar said.
The Nabucco pipeline project, valued at $12.9 billion, would link the European market with the energy-rich producing nations of central Asian countries via Azerbaijan, Georgia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Hungry, Romania and Austria.
Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Iran, and more recently Iraq, are also considered potential suppliers of natural gas through the Nabucco pipeline, with backing in particular from the US for Iraq’s involvement.
The US opposes plans to have the Nabucco pipeline supplied with natural gas from Iran, although a number of other countries, including Turkey, Switzerland and Germany, have expressed serious interest in importing gas from the Islamic Republic.
The Managing Director of Iran’s National Gas Exports Company, Nosratollah Seifi had earlier said the project was already stalled in the absence of any guarantee that enough gas will actually flow through the pipeline to justify the project.
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