So you're probably wondering about the significance of this. For many years now, almost all oil transactions on the market have been based on the US dollar, which is great for the US and pretty unfair for oil exporting countries. By keeping the value of its currency fairly low, the US has been able to buy oil for bargain prices while producers get shafted, and with the continued and accelerating decrease in value of the USD in recent years, the producing countries are getting into a bad financial situation.Iran to Calculate Oil Revenue in Euros, Not Dollars (Update1)
By Ladane Nasseri and Marc Wolfensberger
Dec. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Iran, the world's fourth-largest oil exporter, will calculate its fuel and other overseas revenue in euros rather than dollars, the Oil Ministry said.
``All oil and foreign revenue will be calculated in euros,'' the ministry said in a report released through its in-house press agency Shana. ``It has also been decided that future accounts of various executive organizations will be based in euros.''
Iran has repeatedly said it would increase use of euros in international trade. Hojatollah Ghanimifard, executive director for international affairs at National Iranian Oil Co., the state- run monopoly producer, reaffirmed today all its sales contracts are still quoted in dollars. The U.S. is pressing the UN to impose sanctions against Iran because of its nuclear program.
The statements from Iran are ``not very clear,'' said Amelia Torres, spokeswoman for European Union Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia, in a daily briefing in Brussels.
Iran's Central Bank Governor Ebrahim Sheibany didn't return calls seeking comment. Deputy Governor Mohammad Mojarrad's office said he was out of the country and couldn't take questions.
National Iranian Oil President Gholamhossein Nozari, who last week said Iran was selling 57 percent of its crude in euros, wasn't available to comment, his office said.
The Tehran Times on Dec. 6 said Iran had started switching euros for dollars in its oil sales, citing an unidentified person at the Oil Ministry. Iran Daily reported Iran wanted to cut its dollar-based transactions to a minimum, citing Minister of Economy Davoud Danesh-Ja'fari.
Euro Clause
The country's oil-export contracts for months have included a clause that allows the nation to seek payment in the euro and other currencies.
``All our contracts are based on dollar quotations,'' said Ghanimifard in Tehran. ``Banks of the buyers and sellers can arrange for the payment to be in any other currency.'' He declined to comment on the share of Iranian oil that's paid for in euros.
The dollar has slipped 9.5 percent against the euro this year and may weaken further as oil producers including the United Arab Emirates, Venezuela and Indonesia plan to put more of their funds into the European currency.
Banco Central de Venezuela has slashed the percentage of its $35.9 billion worth of reserves invested in dollars and gold to 80 percent from 95 percent a year ago, said Maza Zavala.
The country, the world's fifth-largest oil supplier, has boosted its euro holdings to 15 percent, from less than 5 percent in the same period.
Bank Indonesia is boosting euro holdings, said Senior Deputy Governor Miranda S Goeltom in a Dec. 13 interview in Jakarta. Indonesia has $39.9 billion in reserves. Sultan Bin Nasser al- Suwaidi, the governor of the Central Bank of the UAE, last month said he was considering when to shift as much as 8 percent of the nation's $24.9 billion in reserves into euros.
Ever since the Euro established itself as a legitimate currency for international trade, there have been quiet talks and mumblings in OPEC to use the Euro as the new currency for conducting trade in oil. In recent years they've experimented with the Euro, just a few small accounts to test out the market. Now Iran, one of the founding OPEC members and among its most influential has decided to make a wholesale switch to Euros, and it's quite possible that other members will follow. If that happens and the world's oil is traded in Euros instead of greenbacks, things will become very interesting.