PARIS (Reuters) - IranAir has taken delivery of its second Western jet under a nuclear sanctions deal with major powers, an Airbus A330 long-haul aircraft, the European planemaker (>> Airbus Group) said.

The A330 was handed over in Toulouse, France on Friday and joins a smaller A321 delivered to Iran earlier this year.

The A330 is expected to be used initially on European routes and on flights to Beijing and Kuala Lumpur.

At a later date, IranAir plans to use new long-haul jets to reopen routes previously closed because it had grounded some ageing Boeing 747s, IranAir Chairman Farhad Parvaresh told Reuters.

Delivery of the new A330 aircraft was held up by last-minute talks over its Rolls-Royce (>> Rolls-Royce Holding PLC) engines and spare parts, but comes in time for the Iranian New Year later in March.

The 238-seat aircraft delivered on Friday was originally built for Latin American airline Avianca but was bought back by Airbus after that airline negotiated a reduction in its orders.

Industry sources say Iran is expected to have negotiated a competitive price to take the surplus jet off Airbus's hands.

Uncertainty remains over the timing of the rest of the orders as banks shy away from deals with Iran, fearing a "snapback" of international sanctions or U.S. fines if they are deemed to be breaking U.S. sanctions that remain in force.

"We are working very closely with Airbus and we are both very keen to stay on the schedule and to the contract that we made together," Parvaresh said.

IranAir is also in talks to finalise a deal to buy 20 aircraft from European turboprop maker ATR (>> Leonardo SpA).

(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Susan Fenton and Edmund Blair)

Stocks treated in this article : Airbus Group, Boeing Co, Leonardo SpA, Rolls-Royce Holding PLC