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Iran becomes the ninth member of an exclusive club of nations tapping geothermal energy

Iran -Earth Enegry

On December 22, the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) reported that an almost four-decades-long project to develop the technology to harness geothermal energy has produced the intended result and Iran has finally become the 9th nation in possession of the technology to tap into geothermal resources to generate energy. What comes next is a partial translation of the report:

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Iran has become the 9th country which has the technology to exploit geothermal energy. The project which got underway before the Islamic revolution and has seen 14 different governments take and leave office finally came to fruition after 39 years.

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Over the years, the project went through lots of ups and downs for different reasons including sanctions. It was shelved for a while before being taken up again.

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Yousef Armodeli, the managing director of the Renewable Energy Organization of Iran says, “Fifteen wells have already been drilled, and seven have run into geothermal reserves; with temperatures at 240˚C, they are highly efficient. Feasibility studies suggest the potential of electricity production in the region under study [that is to say Meshkinshahr] stands at about 250 MW.

In Phase One of the project to develop the geothermal field, a pilot 5MW geothermal power plant is expected to be set up. First though, we need to build a plant to turn thermal energy into electricity. An Iranian contractor which has won the tender to build the plant and its turbines is already working on it. The power station will be operational in two years to generate 5MW of electricity.”

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Studies presented in 2008 by the Renewable Energy Organization of Iran suggest that almost a dozen areas across Iran are suitable for generation of geothermal energy.

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Court orders 7th floor of the cell phone hub of the capital removed

Iran-Alaeddin mobile store

Arman-e Emrooz newspaper on December 22 quoted an official with the Court of Administrative Justice as saying that the court has ordered the seventh floor of Alaeddin Shopping Center in Tehran to be destroyed. The following is a partial translation of the report:

Musa Ghorbani, the deputy chairman of the Court of Administrative Justice for judicial affairs, said the owner of the [cell phone] shopping center had illegally constructed the additional floor, but the court has now ordered it removed.

He said the owner will naturally appeal the court’s verdict, adding due to the compelling evidence the ruling is unlikely to be overturned.

The owner – plaintiff – had filed complaints against a decision by the Article 100 Commission of Tehran Municipality to destroy the building’s seventh floor, he said, adding his complaint was overturned in the court of first instance.

According to a report by the Fire Department, Center for Justice Department Experts and Tehran Construction Engineering Organization, the construction in the shopping center is both illegal and untechnical, he said.

The official further said the building is a threat to its occupants, adding it should be pulled down in order to avoid any further damage to the structure.

The verdict of the court of first instance was released more than 20 days ago and the owner has 20 days, since the verdict is officially announced, to appeal.

Belgian Court Orders Return of Smuggled Antiquities to Iran

law

Shir Dal-drinking-cupA regional Belgian appeals court ruled that a consignment of antiquities, including more than 300 historical objects discovered in Iran some 50 years ago, must be returned to the Islamic Republic, overturning previous verdicts that were challenged by Iran’s diplomatic channels.

The appeals court of Belgium’s Liege ordered that the historical objects, which have been kept at a museum in the European country for decades, be given back to Iran, Mohsen Mohebbi, an official at Iran’s presidential office said on Tuesday.

The invaluable antiquities had been discovered in Khurvin, a rural area at Iran’s northern province of Alborz, about 50 years ago.

The historical objects, dating back to 2000 B.C., had been discovered by a French woman and were later smuggled out of Iran by a Belgian diplomat, according to the Iranian officials.

“The items are scheduled to be transferred to Iran soon,” Mohebbi said.

Iran felicitates Tunisians on successful presidential elections

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham
Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marziyeh Afkham

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham congratulated the Tunisian nation and government on holding the recent presidential election successfully.

Afkham congratulated the Tunisian nation and government on successful holding of the presidential election and described it as a stabilizer of the democratic process in that country and an important achievement of the Tunisian Revolution.

Veteran politician Beji Caid Essebsi won Tunisia’s first free presidential election, beating rival and incumbent Moncef Marzouki with 55.68 percent of the vote against 44.32 percent, official results showed on Monday.

The ballot marked the final step in Tunisia’s transition to democracy after an uprising that ousted autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011 and inspired the Arab Spring revolts across North Africa and the Middle East.

Essebsi, a former official in Ben Ali’s one-party administration, recast himself as a technocrat.

A look at Iranian newspaper front pages on Dec. 24

Iranian Newspapers Headlines
Iranian Newspapers Headlines

The comments of the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council about nuclear talks and ties with the United States dominated the front pages of many Iranian newspapers on Wednesday. The three-leg regional tour of the speaker of the Islamic Consultative Assembly that has taken him to Syria, Lebanon and Iraq where he took up regional questions as well as issues of mutual interests with senior officials also appeared on the front pages of dailies. Also in the news was the ruling by a Belgian court that will eventually see the return to Iran of historical items dating back 4,000 years.

Abrar: “Tehran supports political dialogue in Lebanon,” Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said at a meeting with the Lebanese prime minister in Beirut.

 

Abrar newspaper 12 - 24


Abrar-e Eghtesadi: A ban has been imposed on imports of palm oil. [It came after the use of palm oil in a number of dairy plants caused quite a stir in the country earlier this year.]

Abrar-e Eghtesadi: The economy minister has said interest rates will be cut next year. His comments came less than a week after the Central Bank decided to raise interest rates on 6- and 9-month accounts.

 

Abrare eghtesadi newspaper 12 - 24


Aftab-e Yazd: “Old age was not the only determining factor in the Guardian Council’s decision to disqualify Hashemi Rafsanjani [when he wanted to run for president in 2013],” said former spokesman of the council Abbasali Kadkhodaei.

 

Aftabe yazd newspaper 12 - 24


Arman-e Emrooz: A great victory for Iran. Following a Belgium court order, 4,000-year-old Iranian antiques will return home.

Arman-e Emrooz: The justice minister has reported corruption to the tune of 700 billion rials (almost $23 million) in a bank. “So far we have been unable to discover all the assets of Babak Zanjani [who stands accused of massive corruption],” Mostafa Pourmohammadi said.

 

Armane emruz newspaper 12 - 24


Ebtekar: “The Supreme Leader does not seek to bring nuclear talks to a halt,” said Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of the Supreme National Security Council.

 

Ebtekar newspaper 12 - 24


Emtiaz: Following a drop in precipitation levels this year, the threat of drought looms in 20 provinces across the nation.

 

Emtiaz newspaper 12 - 24


Etemad: Roozan daily has been banned.

Etemad: Saudi Arabia has dropped an oil bombshell by saying it wouldn’t cut crude production even if prices fell to 20 dollars a barrel.

 

Etemad newspaper 12 - 24


Ettela’at: Iranian Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani has held talks with officials in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon mostly on terrorist threats facing the region.

Ettela’at: IS terrorists have suffered back-to-back defeats following an Iraqi army offensive in the north.

 

Ettelaat newspaper 12 - 24


Farhikhtegan: A bill that envisions punishment for students who cheat in writing their dissertations has been presented to the Cabinet.

 

Farhikhtegan newspaper 12 - 24


Hambastegi: “Differences of opinion among Muslims should not snowball into conflicts,” said Chairman of the Expediency Council Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Hambastegi: “Iran seeks to see security and sustainable peace prevail in the region,” said the Iranian parliament speaker after a meeting with senior Iraqi Shiite cleric Ayatollah Sistani.

 

Hambastegi newspaper 12 - 24


Hemayat: “Iran does not seek to resume diplomatic ties with the United States,” said Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani.

 

Hemayat newspaper 12 - 24


Iran: New arrangements to allow Iranian male expats who have not completed their military duty to pay fines instead is a major step that facilitates the return home of the elite.

 

Iran newspaper 12 - 24


Kaenat: “Officials are determined to take on corruption,” said Minister of Justice Mostafa Pourmohammadi.

 

Kaenaat newspaper 12 - 24


Kayhan: The Iraqi army has taken over the road IS militants use to travel back and forth between Iraq and Syria.

 

kayhan newspaper 12 - 24


Qods: A Russian team seeks the signature of the captain of the Iranian national volleyball team. Saeed Marouf has been offered an astronomical figure.

Qods: Iran has warned foreign surveillance aircraft ahead of a major military maneuvers it will hold in the south.

 

Ghods newspaper 12 - 24


Resalat: Abbasali Kadkhodaei, an advisor to the secretary of the Guardian Council, has called for designation of a court to hear the cases of Mousavi and Karroubi [two candidates who disputed the results of the 2009 presidential elections and caused unrest].

 

Resalat newspaper 12 - 24]


SMT: The budget allocated to the mining sector is to increase by 50 percent.

SMT: Iran’s industrial production has registered a 58 percent hike.

 

Samt newspaper 12 - 24

 

Resumption of ties with US not on Iran agenda: Shamkhani

Ali-Shamkhani

A senior Iranian official says Tehran does not seek to resume diplomatic ties with Washington even if a comprehensive nuclear deal is reached between the Islamic Republic and P5+1.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) Ali Shamkhani said Iran and the US “can behave in a way that they do not use their energy against each other [in the region]. A nuclear agreement can be very crucial in this regard.”

“Everything will depend on the honesty of the Americans in the nuclear talks,” he added.

He rejected assumptions that regular meetings between Iranian and American diplomats during the Iran-P5+1 nuclear talks could lead to rapprochement between the two countries.

Iran and the US severed diplomatic ties in the aftermath of the Islamic Revolution in the country in 1979.

“Negotiations are only for the nuclear issue,” the SNSC secretary said.

He emphasized that Iran would not buckle under international sanctions and would not retreat from its rights based on the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

“We will not die if there is no agreement and we will not go to heaven if we reach an agreement,” Shamkhani said.

Iran and the P5+1 countries – the US, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany – wrapped up their latest round of talks on the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program in the Swiss city of Geneva on December 17. Iranian and American diplomats have also held a few rounds of talks over Tehran’s nuclear program.

Shamkhani further said the US-led airstrikes against the Takfiri ISIL terrorists in Iraq have been ineffective.

He said Iran only cooperates with the Iraqi government in the fight against terrorists.

The ISIL terrorists control some parts of Syria and Iraq. They are engaged in crimes against humanity in the areas under their control.

France to release Ali Reza Qorbani’s album

Iranian vocalist- Ali Reza Qorbani

Eminent Iranian vocalist Ali Reza Qorbani’s new album, Lost in Love, is slated to be released in French capital of Paris.

Recorded by the French company, Accords Croisés, the album includes Iranian traditional songs.

The songs have been inspired from the works by the classical Persian poets Abu-Saeid Abul-Kheir and Mowlavi as well as the works by the contemporary poets Fereidoon Moshiri and Mohammad-Reza Shafiei Kadkani.

Lost in Love was composed by the Iranian musician Saman Samimi, who is also a Kamancheh – an Iranian bowed string instrument – maestro.

The album will hit the market with the French title of Éperdument on January 27.

Qorbani has performed concert tours in a number of countries like Germany, Belgium, Algeria, Greece, Turkey, Denmark and Ireland.

He also took part in the Sounds of Persia Festival in Toronto, Canada, and the annual Festival de Saintes in France.

Qorbani, along with a number of Iranian and Tunisian musicians, also had Persian and Arabic performances in Morocco and France. He was warmly welcomed by the audience, particularly traditional Persian music lovers.

He has studied under prominent Iranian musicians like Khosrow Soltani, Behrouz Abedini, Mehdi Fallah, Ahmad Ebrahimi, and Dariush Tala’i, whom he accompanied in numerous concerts.

Iran’s top MP raps regional support for terrorism

Iran-Ali-Larijani

Iran’s Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani has criticized certain regional countries for implicitly backing terrorist groups, saying their support has led to the spread of terrorism.

Speaking in the Iraqi holy city of Najaf on Tuesday, Larijani said some countries in the region, however, have sided with the Iraqi people and expressed their opposition to terrorist groups.

“That many regional countries have realized the region’s sensitivities and the danger of terrorism over the past year is a step forward,” the Iranian parliament speaker said.

However, he called for more consultation among regional states on the issue of terrorism.

He also said that the main solution to the scourge of terrorism is collective cooperation and the support of Muslim states for the Iraqi government.

Larijani, who arrived in Iraq on the last leg of a regional three-country tour early Tuesday, noted that his trip is aimed at exchanging views with the senior officials of the country on expansion of Tehran-Baghdad relations and developments in the Middle East, particularly terrorism.

[…]

On Sunday the Iranian parliament speaker kicked off his regional tour which has already taken him to Syria and Lebanon.

Fars News Agency answers the questions of two Iranian university professors through words of an American

Zibakalam- Shirzad

The comments of Sadegh Zibakalam [a university professor and political analyst] and Ahmad Shirzad [a university professor and former MP] on the country’s nuclear program at a student gathering at University of Tehran have drawn an angry reaction from principlist media and political figures, including some MPs. In addition to an editorial by its managing editor Hossein Shariatmadri, Kayhan ran a report by Fars News Agency on December 22 which took a swipe at the two. The following is the translation of the piece which appeared on page two of the principlist daily:

Following iconoclastic comments by Sadegh Zibakalam and Ahmad Shirzad that threw Iran’s nuclear program into doubt, Fars News Agency’s deputy editor for research has sent each a copy of Manufactured Crisis* by American investigative journalist Gareth Porter.

In a cover letter, the Fars News Agency official told the pair, “You have said that the country has had to experience pressures and sanctions for opting to have nuclear technology. Nuclear program has turned into an honor issue and one cannot negotiate on their honor. Why should we tolerate sanctions and pressures? We have crossed the red lines of major powers. What difference does it make to have 10,000 centrifuges or simply 10? No water can be removed from the nuclear well!”

Seyyed Yaser Jebraeili went on to say, “American Gareth Porter has presented evidence to answer all the questions you Iranians have posed. If these questions and the like really prompted you to scratch your heads and if by posing them in a student gathering, you truly sought answers, going through Manufactured Crisis will help you put those questions to rest. I hope you are man enough to rethink your line of thinking and make your revision public. Come out of the Liberalist camp and join the ranks of the nation.”

 

Manufactured Crisis book* [Amazon Description] In Manufactured Crisis, Gareth Porter brings together the results of his many years of research into Iran’s nuclear technology program. He shows that the origins of the Iran nuclear “crisis” lay not in an Iranian urge to obtain nuclear weapons but, rather, in a sustained effort by the United States and its allies to deny Iran its right, as guaranteed in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, to have any nuclear program at all. The book highlights the impact that the United States’ alliance with Israel had on Washington’s pursuit of its Iran policy and sheds new light on the US strategy of turning the International Atomic Energy Agency into a tool of its anti-Iran policy.

Sadegh Zibakalam: I really thank the Worriers

Sadegh Zibakalam

Arman-e Emrooz, a reformist daily, on December 22 ran an exclusive interview with Sadegh Zibakalam, a political analyst and university professor, on the Western-imposed sanctions on Tehran and their effects on the Iranian economy as well as the viewpoints of the so-called Worriers [former President Ahmadinejad’s supporters who proclaim to be worried and keep sounding alarms about the state of affairs in the country since the rise to power of the moderate government of Hassan Rouhani]. The following is the translation of the Q & A:

 

You have earlier said that a breakthrough in nuclear talks will open up an opportunity for Iran to make an economic leap and that such a possible breakthrough will bring considerable economic benefits to the country.

Despite the fact that sanctions have been said to have no economic impact and the country’s economic woes are blamed on mismanagement, I believe that it’s not true. I don’t want to deny the role of mismanagement. When the eleventh government took over last year, a deputy minister of industries, mines and trade said that half of the country’s production units had been closed down due to lack of raw material, spare parts and venturecapital – for which sanctions are to blame – and the other half are running below capacity.

Over $120 billion of Iran’s assets has been frozen in overseas banks, of which around $4 billion has been given back to Tehran under the Geneva Interim Deal. Iran is to get $700 million each month [under what was agreed in the November 24, 2014 nuclear talks]. If the knot of nuclear talks is untied, the effects of such openness will be first seen on the economic front.

 

You said in a letter to nuclear negotiators that efforts to circumvent sanctions have given rise to corruption. What do you mean exactly?

Under President Ahmadinejad officials said they had managed to bypass sanctions, but it has become clear today that, in President Rouhani’s words, the then government bypassed the [national] economy, not the sanctions. In other words, no matter what angle you look at the case from, there is ambiguity. When Iran is not allowed to sell more than 700,000-800,000 barrels of oil [per day] and the international financial system learns that the money [which is going to be transferred] belongs to Iran, it blocks the money. That’s why the country has to do its transactions covertly.

 

Direct talks between Iran and the US were the turning point of Iran-P5+1 nuclear negotiations in Geneva. What’s your take on mutual talks between representatives of Tehran and Washington and their overall impact on the negotiations?

Certainly it is a step forward. We should have opened bilateral talks with the US many years ago and asked ourselves why Iran harbors hostility toward the US. Now it will be very helpful if we review the areas of contention between the two countries and mull over which line each side has taken and what they are calling for.

 

Although the US foreign policy establishment has one single attitude, various political groups have taken different attitudes toward Iran’s nuclear case. How should Iran react to such groups and their approaches?

Political groups in the US, as a whole, were opposed to Iran. Things changed after June, 14, 2013 [when President Rouhani came to power] which was followed by efforts by Messrs. Zarif and Araghchi and others to have direct talks with the US secretary of state and other American negotiators. They did what they did to change the atmosphere. This [change] was missing before.

But now senior US officials have met with Dr. Rouhani’s Foreign Minister [Mohammad Javad] Zarif, sat around the negotiating table and exchanged handshakes. This has not been easy.

In the interim, conservative Republicans in the US believe that Secretary John Kerry and [President] Obama have made a mistake [by dealing with Iran]; that’s why you see Republicans and [Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin] Netanyahu are placing pressures on Obama, trying to make their case that trusting Iran is not the right thing to do.

Republicans are opposed to Iran. That’s true. In the new US Congress which is to meet in a few weeks those who are against Iran hold the majority. I think if we can go tougher on the anti-Iran elements in Washington in coming months, we can remain hopeful about positive results. If so, Republicans will fail in their efforts to impose a new set of sanctions on Iran, because they cannot easily withstand the pressure the public opinion brings to bear. Despite the fact that the Republican-majority Congress is deeply opposed to Iran, I am still hopeful that they cannot slap new sanctions on Iran in the months to come.

 

In remarks in the University of Tehran, you said that the country owes the opportunity it has been given to openly critique the nuclear policies to hardliners. Would you please elaborate on that?

I really thank the Worriers. They presented us with an opportunity to openly analyze [the upsides and downsides] of the nuclear policies, a first in a decade. After Iran and P5+1 inked the Geneva deal in November 2013, hardliners began to attack the so-called Joint Plan of Action.

Then the so-called Worriers staged [protest] gatherings outside the building which used to serve as the US embassy in Tehran and other places during which they publicly hit out at Geneva talks. Some of them went as far as denounce the Geneva deal as being worse than the Treaty of Turkmenchay [the name of an agreement Iran and the Russian Empire signed in 1828 in Torkamanchay, under which the former ceded to Russia control of several areas in the South Caucasus].

The break came when some criticized the nuclear policies the government of President Rouhani had adopted. After all, double standards were unacceptable. In other words, you cannot let others dispute Dr. Rouhani’s nuclear policies but say that nobody is allowed to challenge those of Mr. [Saeed] Jalili and Ahmadinejad.

When President Rouhani’s nuclear policies came in for criticism, naturally similar policies of Mr. Ahmadinejad and principlists were fair game. At least they were not as off limits as they used to be. This helped me join the ranks of other critics and talk in a roundtable in the University of Tehran. That is what the opponents of President Rouhani’s did in other universities in earlier weeks.

The point is this: you cannot say that opposition to Mr. Rouhani is ok, but you have no right to talk against or critically analyze the nuclear policies of Ahmadinejad, Jalili and their fellow principlists. Undoubtedly, we owe the [open] atmosphere we enjoy today to the Worriers. I really thank them [for what they did].

 

The very group, as you put it the Worriers, have in recent days strongly railed against what you said in your speech in Tehran University.

I sincerely thank them. Since December 17 when the three-hour meeting was held in Tehran University, attacks were launched in radio and TV programs, as well as a number of principlist newspapers and news agencies against what Dr. Ahmad Shirzad and Dr. Davoud Hermidas Bavand and I said in the gathering. I think it is a good thing, because people – out of curiosity – seek to learn what we said that IRIB and the principlist press keep talking about.

I have made a laundry list of those who have talked against my words in the last 24 hours. These critical views are good because they help society open up [to opposing views].

I really welcome the viewpoints of our friends and remain thankful to them. Basically, this is exactly what freedom, democracy and enlightenment of the public opinion call for. In other words, you can easily talk about different issues and there are other groups which can openly stake out their opposing views.