TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian officials are expressing new worry over the global oil price slump, which is threatening the country’s budget and could undermine its strategy in international nuclear negotiations.
As recently as Tuesday, Iran’s oil ministry was speaking confidently despite the 20 percent global price decline, insisting that it wouldn’t affect the budget. Deputy Oil Minister Rokneddin Javadi said the decrease would be “short lived,” an oil ministry information service said.
But Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, clearly concerned, has directed the oil ministry to seek a meeting of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cartel next month to discuss holding up the price, Iranian news agencies are reporting.
Crude oil has fallen from over $100 a barrel in spring to under $85 a barrel. About 75 percent Iran’s government revenue comes from oil sales, and analysts say the country needs an oil price of around $140 a barrel to sustain its budget.
Iranian Vice President Mohammad Nobakht, acting on Rouhani’s instructions, told Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh to seek the OPEC meeting, Iranian news agencies reported.
Rashed Abbasi, head of a study group associated with the oil ministry, is predicting that prices could fall to under $60 a barrel within a year. Bayazid Mardokhi, an economist associated with Iran’s reformist camp, said a continuing price slump would force the government to cut its overall budget or reduce planned civil engineering projects.
Oil analysts say it is uncertain how long the decline in prices will last. It has been driven by a slowdown in the economies of China and Europe, coupled with strong supply from the United States and some Middle Eastern countries.
But some analysts speculate that it could reflect a longer-term shift away from petroleum use. The last long oil price slump lasted from the mid-1980s to about 2000, and strained the economies of oil-dependent states such as the Soviet Union and Iran.
The Iranian economy has been showing some signs of life recently, due to better management and some easing of international sanctions after Iran signed an interim nuclear deal last November.
Iranian officials have hoped that this new strength could make it easier for Iran to walk away from the international talks over its nuclear program if the West insisted on tough terms for a long-term deal.
However, the economic pressure from the oil price decline could make a collapse of the nuclear talks more painful, and stir unhappiness among middle-class Iranians who yearn for a higher standard of living and better ties to the West.
But it’s not clear that such a scenario would worry Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the powerful Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, which controls much of the Iranian economy. They want their nation to turn away from the West and to accept the privations of what Khamenei calls the “resistance economy.”
It is not certain that OPEC would agree to bolster prices. The group, which still accounts for about 40 percent of global oil supply, is divided. Saudi Arabia, Iran’s regional rival, is apparently willing to have oil prices fall.
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