Iran Wants to Use Brazilian Ethanol to Circumvent US Trade Blockade

Miguel Jorge with Iran's Mehrabian The Iranian government is interested in using Brazilian ethanol in its vehicles. This information was given by the Brazil’s minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Miguel Jorge, who led a trade delegation to the Middle East and is in Tehran.

The interest in Brazilian fuel was shown at a meeting between Miguel Jorge and the Iranian minister of Industry and Mines, Ali Akbar Mehrabian. Both opened, on Tuesday (13), at the Parnasian Esteghlal International Hotel, the business meetings between Brazilian and Iranian executives. A group of 86 men and women from Brazil participate in the delegation.

According to information disclosed by Miguel Jorge, Iran is interested in Brazilian ethanol due to the problems it is facing with gasoline supply. The country in the Middle East produces oil, but it does not have refineries and is having difficulties importing gasoline due to the trade blockade it faces.

Ethanol, according to the Brazilian minister, would be an alternative. Miguel Jorge believes that it would have to be bought in Brazil – and not produced in Iran – as the land in the country is not very appropriate for agriculture.

According to the Brazilian minister, it is possible for the Iranians to invest in funds connected to Brazilian ethanol mills. Attracting Iranian investment in this area, in ethanol and agriculture, in fact, was one of Miguel Jorge’s objectives in the mission.

At the opening of the meetings, on Tuesday morning, the minster spoke to those present about the Brazilian experience with flexible fuel technology, in which a vehicle may run on ethanol, gasoline or any combination of the two.

The delegation’s visit prompted a series of discussions about cooperation. According to Mehrabian, during the visit that Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has scheduled to Tehran, in May, an agreement in the mining area should be signed. According to Miguel Jorge, cooperation may help business in the sector.

In the Iranian capital, representatives of Vale, a Brazilian mining company, met with mining sector representatives to discuss possible business and partnerships. The Iranian minister also showed interest in the Brazilian experience with production of electricity.

During the meeting this morning, minister Miguel Jorge pointed out the advances in relations between Brazil and Iran, which took place mainly after president Lula was inaugurated in office, in 2003. Brazilian exports to the country rose from US$ 491 million in 2002 to US$ 1.2 billion last year.

Mehrabian said that both countries are going to make an effort to simplify trade, including product transport and financing. The ministers called on Brazilian businessmen present to help boost trade.

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Equities Resume Rally

Latin American stocks advanced, as investors resumed a recent buying spree, after sending shares ...

Brazil Reaffirms Commitment to Africa

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva repeated his pledge that Brazil will install ...

Spare Me the Quotas and Other American Oddities

It has been revealed that two very white female candidates increased eightfold their chances ...

Brazil Ready to Use 20-Minute HIV Tests

Brazil will start performing “rapid tests” for the diagnosis of AIDS until the end ...

Consumers Blast U.S. for Taxing Brazil Steel

U.S. steel-consuming industries will continue to struggle to be competitive in the wake of ...

Brazil Doubles Exports But Lags Way Behind China

The series of Foreign Trade Encounters, held for the 106th time last Thursday, May ...

Brazilian Seeks Foreign Partner for His Organic Hibiscus Goodies

It took four years of research on hibiscus flowers, a plant of African and ...

No Variant Virus in Brazilian Foot and Mouth Disease Outbreak

The secretary of Agricultural Protection in the Ministry of Agriculture, Gabriel Alves Maciel, dismissed ...

New US Ambassador to Brazil Is Bush Fundraiser Who Served in the Netherlands

Ambassador Clifford M. Sobel will serve as the next Ambassador of the United States ...

Mafia Kills 7, Burns Buses and Spreads Terror in Brazil. Again!

Once again Brazil’s largest city, São Paulo (10.5 million inhabitants) is at the mercy ...