BAKU, Azerbaijan, July 3. Iranian President
Masoud Pezeshkian and Chairman of Turkmenistan’s Halk Maslahaty
(Parliament) Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov held talks in Tehran.
This was reported in a post published on July 3 on the Iranian
government’s official X account.
“Pezeshkian called bilateral ties a model of brotherhood and
good neighborliness, stressing the need to accelerate joint energy,
transit, and trade agreements,” the post says.
According to the information, the negotiations took place on the
sidelines of funeral events in Tehran attended by foreign
delegations.
The Iranian president also thanked the Turkmen delegation for
its participation and discussed prospects for expanding bilateral
cooperation, according to the report.
Meanwhile, Iran is one of Turkmenistan’s longest-standing
regional partners, with bilateral cooperation spanning energy,
transport, trade, and border connectivity. The two countries share
a 1,100-kilometer border and maintain an institutional dialogue
through a Joint Intergovernmental Commission on Economic
Cooperation, which regularly reviews progress across sectors
ranging from gas and electricity to transport, customs,
agriculture, and investment. During the commission’s latest meeting
in Tehran in 2025, the sides also discussed the creation of
cross-border trade and economic zones to stimulate bilateral
commerce.
Energy remains a cornerstone of the relationship. In recent
years, Ashgabat and Tehran have expanded cooperation on natural gas
supplies, including swap arrangements and discussions on direct
exports and transit through Iran to third-country markets. The two
sides have also advanced cooperation in electricity transmission
and maritime transport, while recent high-level meetings resulted
in agreements covering natural gas, customs cooperation, port
partnerships between Turkmenbashi and Amirabad, and
intergovernmental cooperation plans.
Transport and logistics have become another major pillar of
bilateral ties as both countries seek to strengthen regional
connectivity. Turkmenistan and Iran have been working to increase
cargo flows across their shared border, improve road, rail, and
port links, and enhance multimodal transport routes connecting
Central Asia with the Persian Gulf and broader international
markets. Recent bilateral discussions have also focused on
expanding cooperation in maritime transport, customs procedures,
and transit infrastructure, reflecting the growing strategic
importance both countries attach to cross-border connectivity.
