TEHRAN - An Iranian official said on Saturday that European firms are in talks for Iran to join the EU's flagship Nabucco gas pipeline project, which aims to reduce the bloc's reliance on Russia, Mehr news agency reported.
"At the moment some European companies have started unofficial talks for Iran to join this pipeline," Mehr quoted Reza Kasaizadeh, managing director of National Iranian Gas Exports Company, as saying.
He gave no details.
The European Union is planning to build the 3,300-kilometre (2,050-mile) Nabucco pipeline to transport gas from the Middle East and Central Asia to its energy-hungry consumers in Europe while bypassing Russia.
Observers have said that if the Nabucco project is to be profitable it will definitely need gas from Iran, which holds the world's second largest gas reserves but is also subject to international sanctions over its nuclear programme.
Iran insists that the Nabucco plan will not succeed without its vast, untapped gas reserves.
Iran imports 25 million cubic meters (883 million cubic feet) a day of gas from Turkmenistan and plans to increase it by eight million cm (282.5 million cubic feet) in the coming months.
It exports around the same amount to Turkey.