Gasoline Black Market thrives in Iran
Since authorities in Iran began rationing gasoline last year, a black market has been created to meet the needs of drivers in Iran.
Iran is the world’s fourth-largest producer of oil. But its government imposed gasoline rationing last year in hopes of trimming extensive government subsidies. That has created a booming black market across the country _ feeding Iranians’ discontent with the economic policies of hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
In the capital Tehran and other cities, the black market thrives around gasoline stations and mostly at night as drivers looking to buy fuel approach others who have high gasoline quotas, such as taxis or vans.
But in this city on the Persian Gulf, the boulevard officially named Pasdaran Avenue after Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards operates as an open-air black market in broad daylight. Its new nickname is meant as a sneer by Iranians, bitter at the irony that their country, a leading member of the world oil cartel OPEC, has resorted to rationing.
The Gas and Oil Smuggling market is estimated at $5.2 billion.







