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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
France’s Total Officially Leaves Iran as Minister Says Country’s Oil Facilities Worn Out
2018-08-21
[Asharq Al-Awsat]French energy giant Total has officially quit its multi-billion-dollar gas project in Iran, Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said on Monday, following fresh US sanctions.

"Total has officially left the agreement for the development of phase 11 of South Pars (gas field). It has been more than two months that it announced that it would leave the contract," he told parliament's news agency ICANA.

The United States said in May that it was abandoning the 2015 nuclear deal and reimposing sanctions on Iran in two phases in August and November.

The second phase will target Iran's oil industry.

The other parties to the nuclear deal -- Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia -- have vowed to stay in the accord but their companies risk huge penalties if they keep doing business in Iran.

Total had already said it would be impossible to remain in Iran unless it received a specific waiver from Washington, which was not granted.

Total signed up in July 2017 for the $4.8 billion (4.1 billion euro) project to develop the field off Iran's southern coast, as the lead partner alongside the state-owned China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and Iran's Petropars.

It was due to make an initial $1 billion investment, but the company said in May that it had spent less than 40 million euros on the project to date, as uncertainty over US actions mounted.

Total would have been highly vulnerable to US penalties for remaining in Iran.

The company has $10 billion of capital employed in its US assets, and US banks are involved in 90 percent of its financing operations, Total said in May.

It remains unclear whether CNPC will take over Total's stake in the project.

A previous contract for CNPC to develop the field at South Pars was suspended in 2011 after it failed to make progress.

The urgent need for investment to upgrade Iran's dilapidated energy infrastructure was a key motivator behind its decision to join the 2015 nuclear deal.

Zanganeh appeared in parliament on Monday to answer questions on safety concerns following a number of recent fires at refineries.

"A big part of the oil industry has been worn out and the necessary renovation has not taken place," he told parliament, according to the official IRNA news agency.

He said there were 10 cases per day of tubes perforating in Iran's southern facilities, and that some refineries were as much as 80 years old, "whereas the useful life of an industrial unit is 30 years".

"We have no resources for renovating them," he added.
Posted by:3dc

#7  Looks like the Chinese will have Iran all to themselves.
Posted by: Spot   2018-08-21 10:58  

#6  So the sanctions are working.
Maybe too well if Iran chooses to annex Kuwait for their facilities.
Posted by: Skidmark   2018-08-21 10:56  

#5  That's what happens when you spend your pallets of cash on terrorism instead of infrastructure.
Posted by: DarthVader   2018-08-21 09:02  

#4  Yeah, I was parsing it as “totally officially” and having some cognitive dissonance regarding valleyspeak in Iran.
Posted by: KBK   2018-08-21 08:25  

#3  So they're "Totally Gone"?
Posted by: ed in texas   2018-08-21 07:06  

#2  Mullahs work slower than Caracas' in depreciating their facilities. More to loot?
Posted by: Procopius2k   2018-08-21 05:24  

#1  I'm sure the claim of 'facility depletion' is just a striking coincidence.
Posted by: Raj   2018-08-21 00:26  

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