Iran has offered new, more alluring terms to reluctant Indian companies to win the investment it craves for its energy sector, despite Western sanctions.
Indian firms keen on Iranian sweeter oil deals
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Iran started offering production sharing contracts (PSCs), long denied to investors, to a group of Indian oil executives visiting Tehran in January, an Indian industry source said.
Tehran’s insistence, until now, on paying contractors back in oil made projects unattractive to foreign firms even before sanctions made it nearly impossible for most to work there.
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi repeated the production sharing offer during an India-Iran Joint Commission meeting with Indian external affairs minister Salman Khurshid in Tehran last weekend, Indian media reported.
Three Indian companies with stakes in a gas field in Iran – Indian Oil Corp., ONGC Videsh and Oil India – told a U.S. government watchdog late last year that they had no plans to pursue further work on the project.
According to Iranian media reports, the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) has been drafting production sharing contracts in the hope of attracting Asian companies, which are not banned by their governments from operating in Iran, to invest in its run-down industry.
Indian press reports said that the two foreign ministers discussed PSCs on Saturday at their meeting in Tehran.
A statement published by the Indian foreign ministry after the meeting said the two sides agreed to study joint investment prospects in both countries but made no mention of energy agreements.
The two ministers did discuss India working to upgrade Iran’s Chahbahar Port near the border with Pakistan to help boost trade with land-locked Afghanistan to the north, according to the Indian statement.
“We are determined to explore and use all capacities for economic cooperation,” Khurshid was quoted as saying in a statement published by the Iranian foreign ministry.
Under Iran’s established buy-back system, contractors are supposed to be paid in oil and gas from projects they develop with their own capital but then have to hand back the project to Iranian companies when completed and wait for pay back.
This system has kept oil majors like Italy’s Eni waiting for multi-million dollar payments for projects they completed decades ago, while sanctions make it still more difficult to get the oil from Iran.
Under the new contracts, NIOC plans to transfer development of small oil and gas fields to contractors so that the state-run Iranian oil company plays only a supervisory role, NIOC director Ahmad Qalebani was reported as saying by Fars News in March.
PSC’s would only be offered for shared fields, he was quoted as saying during a meeting in Tehran on the development of Iran’s contracting system in March.
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