Iran Power Cuts Fuel Fears in Iraq as Scorching Summer Peaks
Iran Power Cuts Fuel Fears in Iraq
as Scorching Summer Peaks
Iran halted its crucial supply of
power to Iraq, fueling fears of protests Tuesday amid instability following the
resignation of Iraq’s electricity minister.
Cash-strapped Iran has put
pressure on Iraq’s government to release payments for power after falling into
arrears. The development comes with months of scorching summer temperatures
still to come, and ahead of much anticipated federal elections.
Electricity Minister Majed Mahdi
Hantoosh submitted his resignation Monday amid popular and political pressure
over repeated power outages across the country. Provinces across the country’s
south — where temperatures currently average 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees
Fahrenheit) — are shortening working hours citing extreme heat.
A call for protests in the
oil-rich province of Basra, often the stage of power-related demonstrations,
was distributed across social media giving the government until 6 pm Tuesday to
restore power.
“Or else we will escalate and all of Basra’s
streets will be cut off, and we will teach the officials a lesson they will
never forget,” it said.
Iraq’s reliance on Iranian energy
imports has geopolitical consequences and has been a source of ongoing tensions
with the US Washington has conditioned successive sanctions waivers — enabling
these imports to continue — on Iraq becoming more energy independent.
The stakes are high for Iraq’s
government as electricity outages have routinely led to violent protests,
particularly in the south. Federal elections are slated for Oct. 10, the first
since mass anti-government protests swept the country in 2019.
Outputs from four cross-border
electricity tie-lines from Iran to Iraq were at zero on Tuesday, according to
Ministry of Electricity data seen by The Associated Press. The total cuts began
this week, a ministry official said. The official requested anonymity because
they are not authorized to brief media. In past weeks supply has fluctuated.
Gas and electricity imports from
Iran often meet up to a third of Iraq’s power demands.
“Iraq relies on Iranian energy imports heavily,
especially in peak summer months,” said Yesar al-Maleki, Gulf analyst at the
Middle East Economic Survey.
“Gas imports from Iran range from 1.5-1.8
billion cubic feet per day. Now, we see generation in the south collapsing
below 1 (gigawatt), meaning not just these lines are offline but even gas flow
is down.”
Iran feeds gas into Iraq through
two pipelines used to power plants in Basra, Samawa, Nasiriyah and Diyala.
Generation from these plants also plummeted, suggesting supply from Iran in
these plants is also low.
The impact has been immediate.
In Basra, the province requires
4,000 megawatts but is currently receiving 830 MW. “It is a catastrophe,” said
al-Maleki.
The cuts will deprive Iraqis of
power to run hospitals, businesses and homes as temperatures rise.
With calls to demonstrate growing
louder, many fear a repeat of violent protests that swept Basra in 2018. These
also coincided with Iranian power cuts over non-payment issues.
Iraq owes Iran $4 billion for
energy imports. The country’ economic crisis has caused delays in part, but even
for money earmarked to pay for imports a complex payment scheme designed to
evade US sanctions has slowed down transfers.
Through the scheme, Iraq is unable
to pay Iran directly for the imports, but can pay for goods, medicines and
other expenses related to Tehran’s diplomatic mission and Iranian companies
working in Iraq. Recently, Iraq purchased vaccines for Tehran.
But Iran has complained the money
is trickling in too slowly.
Provinces across Iraq, meanwhile,
took precautions and shortened working hours to cope with rising temperatures.
Basra, Najaf, Diwanieh and Diyala shortened working days from 8 am to 12 pm.