Iran received its second new Airbus plane on Saturday under an order that Tehran placed last year after a partial lifting of international sanctions.
The A330-200 landed in Tehran’s Mehrabad International Airport to join national carrier Iran Air’s fleet for long-haul flights, state news agency IRNA reported.
Iran Air received its first Airbus, an A321 used for domestic flights, on Jan. 12. It completed a deal for 100 Airbus planes with a list price of around $20 billion on Dec. 22, after approval from Washington as some parts are manufactured in the US.
The purchase, along with a historic deal with US manufacturer Boeing, followed a nuclear deal between Iran and world powers that lifted some sanctions in 2016, in return for limits on Tehran’s nuclear program.
Boeing has said the contract for 80 planes, also finalized in December — Iran’s first with a US aviation firm since its 1979 revolution — was worth $16.6 billion.
Iran projects a demand for between 400 and 500 new commercial airliners over the next decade.

Source: Arab News