JAN. 29 (The Conway Bulletin) – Iran threatened to take Turkmenistan to an international tribunal over a row about gas supplies, worsening a year-long argument between the two neighbours.
Iranian officials said that not only did they contest the value of the outstanding bill that Turkmenistan says Iran still hasn’t paid, but also that the gas Iran had received was of sub-standard quality.
“We are planning to take dispute with Turkmenistan’s state-owned gas company, Turkmengaz, over the quality of the delivered gas to an International Court of Arbitration,” Iranian news agencies quoted Bijan Namdar Zanganeh, the Iranian petroleum minister, as saying.
Turkmenistan stopped sending gas to Iran in January 2017, claiming it had not been paid for deliveries several years earlier.
Some analysts have said that Turkmenistan may be trying to squeeze more money out of Iran for gas supplies to the north of the country because its economy has been floundering. In December, Turkmenistan said that it had started preliminary arbitration proceedings against Iran for what it said was the outstanding amount owed. It did not name the arbitration court that it was targeting or just how far it had gotten with the process.
Iran has been importing gas from Turkmenistan, whose main client is China, since 1997.
ENDS
>>This story was first published in issue 360 of The Conway Bulletin