DHAKA: Iran has reached a deal to buy 100 planes from US plane producer Boeing, and the two sides are awaiting approval by US Treasury authorities, according to the head of Iran’s Civil Aviation Organization.
‘The final obstacle in this area are only the permits from the US Treasury Department,’ Abedzadeh told the state-owned newspaper Iran in remarks published on Sunday, adding that there was no precise timeline for the written contract to be implemented before US Treasury permission.
He said the reported value of $17bn for the contract was not final and that more details would be provided after further negotiations.
‘Out of 250 planes in the country, 230 need to be replaced,’ Ali Abedzadeh added.
Boeing confirmed on Wednesday that it was in talks with Iranian airlines interested in buying its passenger planes.
‘We have been engaged in discussions with Iranian airlines approved by the (US government) about potential purchases of Boeing commercial passenger airplanes and services,’ the company said in an email to the media, reports Al Jazeera.
In February, the US company was granted approval from the US government to explore resuming sales to Iran after US sanctions were partially lifted in January.
So far, Boeing has only been granted permission to present its products to IranAir and a handful of other airlines as it tries to catch up with Europe’s Airbus, which won a provisional deal earlier this year for 118 jets worth $27bn.
Iran has ordered about 200 planes in total from three Western manufacturers since mid-January when economic sanctions were lifted following a deal on Tehran’s nuclear program.
BDST: 2008 HRS, JUN 19, 2016
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