Iran prepared to attract foreign investment: Rouhani
Iran prepared to attract foreign investment: Rouhani
Mon May 2, 2016 6:40AM
Iran’s President Rouhani
welcomes his visiting South Korean counterpart Park Geun-hye at
Sa’adabad Palace in Tehran on May, 2, 2016. (Photo by IRNA)
President Hassan Rouhani says
there is suitable ground for foreign investment in Iran as he receives
his South Korean counterpart Park Geun-hye in Tehran. President
Park was accorded an official welcome in Tehran on Monday on the first
day of her three-day visit, heading South Korea's biggest-ever traveling
business delegation of over 230 executives.
The two presidents
then sat for their first meeting since the establishment of diplomatic
relations between the two countries in 1962.
They were expected to
discuss a wide array of issues, ranging from energy, banking, and
infrastructure to challenges in the Middle East and the Korean
Peninsula. The two sides are also expected to seal deals worth over €10
billion.
President Park is scheduled to attend a conference on
promotion of Tehran-Seoul economic ties as well as investment in Iranian
projects by South Korean companies.
South Korea has said it is
eager to participate in Iran’s development projects and expand economic
cooperation on communication technology, information, healthcare and
culture.
South Korea has been a major importer of Iran’s crude
oil. On Sunday, Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh said Iran's oil
exports to South Korea have more than quadrupled to 400,000 barrels a
day since sanctions were lifted in January.
Iran, whose exports to
South Korea were less than 100,000 barrels a day before sanctions were
lifted, has since worked to quickly boost its output. It has focused on
selling to its traditional customers in Asia, but has also shipped
cargoes to Europe.
According to data from Energy Aspects, global
imports of Iran's crude rose in March to 1.90 million bpd, from 1.51
million bpd in February.
Zangeneh also said Iran and South Korea were working to resolve difficulties in transferring payments for the oil sales.
Iran’s
president (L) reviews the guard of honor with his South Korean
counterpart at Sa’adabad Palace in Tehran on May, 2, 2016. (Photo by
President.ir )World leaders have been
visiting Tehran after the implementation of the nuclear agreement,
dubbed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), between Iran and
the P5+1 group of countries in July 2015.
In a message on his Instagram account on Sunday, President Rouhani said Iran is open to foreign investment.
"Our economy will not get well unless we are able to attract investment," he said.
"Today,
these conditions have been provided and the leaders which travel to
Iran bring with them representatives of scores of important trading
companies," Rouhani added.
East Asian nations are scrambling to
boost economic links with Tehran after the country reached a nuclear
agreement last year. China’s President Xi Jinping visited Iran in
January and Japan signed an investment treaty with Iran a month later.