Wednesday, May 13 2026 18:06
Alina Hovhannisyan

Issues of Iranian LPG  supplies to Armenia resolved - Economy  Minister

Issues of Iranian LPG  supplies to Armenia resolved - Economy  Minister

ArmInfo.The issue of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) supplies from Iran to Armenia has been resolved, and Iranian gas is expected to re-enter the Armenian market in the coming days. Armenia's Minister of Economy, Gevorg Papoyan, made this statement to journalists on May 13 in Aparan during a  campaign event for the ruling "Civil Contract" party.  

According to the Minister, he was informed of this development yesterday by  Armenia's trade attache in Iran. "This means that Iranian LPG will  enter the Armenian market in the coming days, which will have an  impact on price reduction," Papoyan noted.

He emphasized that while Russian LPG currently enters Armenia without  obstruction, price hikes within Russia and the imposition of an  export duty have impacted prices in Armenia.  "I hope the 'Iranian  factor' will influence a price reduction here," the Minister said,  adding noting that he believes a short-term price reduction will lead  to a return to previously existing tariffs. "This issue is on our  agenda. The price of LPG in Aparan is currently 240 drams this is not  where it should be; it needs to go down. The process is moving  slowly. If the price reaches 200 drams in a week, that would be  fantastically good," the Minister stated.

According to data from the RA Customs Service, in Q1 2025, LPG was  sourced primarily from Russia (99.1%), totaling over 126,871.9 tons.  This represented a 30.6% increase in volume and a 45.6% increase in  customs value (to $42.1 million). Meanwhile, LPG supplies from Iran  had dropped by 66% to 553.6 tons (0.4%), with customs value falling  66.7% to $233.9 thousand. Iraqi LPG accounted for 0.1% (218.1 tons),  a 68.3% year-on-year increase, with customs value rising 2.8 times to  $146 thousand. Minor volumes were also imported from Kyrgyzstan,  Kazakhstan, Georgia, Belarus, Turkey, China, Germany, and Poland.