Times of Oman

Siemens signs contract to upgrade Iran rail network

German vice chancellor, Economy and Energy Minister Sigmar Gabriel is on a two-day visit to Tehran

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TEHRAN: Germany’s Siemens signed a contract to upgrade Iran’s railway network on Monday, one of several deals agreed by German firms during a two-day visit to Tehran by Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel.

Gabriel has flown to Iran with a planeful of 120 managers who are keen to re-establish business relations with Iran after it reached a landmark deal with world powers last year to scale back its disputed nuclear programme.

But political concerns, and a range of US sanctions still in place, have so far held back a hoped-for business boom.

Locomotive­s

Siemens said it will supply components for 50 diesel-electric locomotive­s to Iran. It did not disclose the value of the contract, but based on comparable deals, it could be in the low hundreds of millions of euros. The economy ministry said several firms from the Mittelstan­d, the smallto-medium-sized companies that form the backbone of the economy, had also signed deals with Iranian partners. These included SMS group, a builder of steelmakin­g plants, and INTRA industrial solutions.

In addition, Mitsubishi Germany has signed a contract to modernise a gas-fired plant, while plant constructo­r Keller HCW wants to build a brickyard in Iran, it said. Both countries’ central banks have also agreed to technical co-operation.

There was no detail on the size of the agreed deals.

Iran’s Deputy Economy Minister Mohammad Khazaei said earlier that 10 economic agreements would be signed on the sidelines of Gabriel’s visit. “I hope that this will smooth the way between both countries,” he said.

Germany, which has commercial and cultural ties with Iran that go back to the 19th century, was for decades a major trading partner of Tehran before the sanctions allowed China and several other nations to overtake it.

Warning

While industrial firms such as Siemens are keen to benefit from opportunit­ies in Iran, Gabriel has warned Tehran that to normalise ties it must accept Israel’s right to exist and stop what he called Iran’s decisive role in the Syrian civil war, where it has intervened to support President Bashar Al Assad against Western-backed rebels. The German banking sector has been reluctant to underwrite business deals for fear of falling foul of remaining US sanctions imposed on Iran.

Gabriel said earlier that Germany wants to help Iran push ahead with reforms, and promised to remind the United States of its commitment to reduce sanctions against Iran.

He also said that Iran was a reliable credit partner that kept agreements as a rule. German exports to Iran jumped 15 per cent in the first half of the year to 1.13 billion euros and could reach 4 billion euros in the full year, said Michael Tockuss, head of the Hamburg-based German-Iranian Chamber of Commerce.

 ?? — AFP ?? Displaced Iraqis from Hawiyah and the town’s surroundin­g villages arrive at the Kurdish Peshmerga forces’ Maktab Khaled checkpoint, some 35 kilometres south of the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, after fleeing clashes between pro-Iraqi government forces...
— AFP Displaced Iraqis from Hawiyah and the town’s surroundin­g villages arrive at the Kurdish Peshmerga forces’ Maktab Khaled checkpoint, some 35 kilometres south of the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, after fleeing clashes between pro-Iraqi government forces...
 ?? – AFP ?? BOOSTING RELATIONS: Iran’s Economy Minister Ali Tayebnia, left, and German vice chancellor, Economy and Energy Minister Sigmar Gabriel after signing agreements during a German-Iranian Joint Economic Commission (GWK) meeting in Tehran on Monday.
– AFP BOOSTING RELATIONS: Iran’s Economy Minister Ali Tayebnia, left, and German vice chancellor, Economy and Energy Minister Sigmar Gabriel after signing agreements during a German-Iranian Joint Economic Commission (GWK) meeting in Tehran on Monday.

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