![](https://cdnph.upi.com/svc/sv/upi/9671528714223/2018/1/04956e6918f1d17ea89b787168e99d6b/Iran-envisions-currency-arrangements-with-China.jpg)
Masoud Karbasian, the Iranian minister of the economy, said Monday an agreement with China to use their respective currencies for trade could facilitate financial arrangements. Other agreements could extend into China's One Belt One Road Initiative.
"Both sides also discussed reinforcing cooperation in banking, oil, petrochemical and trade fields," the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported.
The belt measure is a multibillion-dollar initiative aimed at integrating the Chinese economy more deeply in Eurasia. Some of the planned initiatives extend into the oil and gas sector.
Speaking last month at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a U.S. think tank, Total CEO Patrick Pouyanné said the U.S. decision could put the advantage in the hands of U.S. adversaries.
"What would be not good neither for the U.S., nor for Europe, is if that at the end only Russia and China can do business in Iran," he said at the time.
Without relief, French supermajor Total was among the European companies that said it would have to leave Iran. Jean-Yves Le Drian, the French minister of European and Foreign Affairs, meanwhile, added that a financial mechanism that's "immune" to the U.S. dollar would secure European financial interests in Iran and ensure its oil can still be exported
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