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Iran planning diesel price hike amid surge in smuggling

File photo shows a tanker refueling at a pumping station in the Iranian capital of Tehran.

Iranian authorities say the government is planning a hike in the price of diesel amid efforts to curb the trafficking of the fuel across the borders.

A member of the managing board of Iran’s department on road transportation said on Saturday that the planned hike would replace a scheme to ration diesel.

Faramrz Maddah said the government had originally planned to limit the amount of fuel given to truck owners through the use of smart electronic cards.

Diesel is currently pumped to trucks across Iran at two prices of 3.15 and 5.02 cents for each liter, much lower than prices charged in neighboring countries where the same unit of the fuel normally costs above $0.3.

The gap has encouraged truck owners to sell the fuel to smugglers who mostly transport it across the borders to Afghanistan or Pakistan or on the sea to Arab countries in the Persian Gulf.

Maddah said imposing restrictions on the delivery of diesel priced at $5.02, which was the government's original plan, would lead to irregularities in the pumping stations.

“The most fundamental solution to reduce smuggling is to make prices realistic,” said Maddah, adding that truck owners possessing electronic cards would still be provided with quotas of diesel at the current minimum price of $3.15.

The planned hike in the price of diesel comes as the government has yet to announce measures to regulate the use of gasoline, the main fuel used by motorists across Iran.

It was announced last month that using smart cards for gasoline delivery would become mandatory at pumping stations across Iran in a near future.

Authorities say that the domestic consumption of the fuel has exceeded 90 million liters a day while suggesting that trafficking across the borders is a main issue.


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