23 Apr 2024
Sunday 12 June 2016 - 10:38
Story Code : 218081

Irans draft oil contracts still need revisions, minister says

Irans new model oil contracts, designed to lure billions of dollars in foreign investment for its energy industry, still need revisions and the government is confident the first deals will be signed within months, Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said.

Regulators in Iran and the countrys oil ministry reached a partial consensus on language in the contracts that were sent to the governments cabinet for approval two weeks ago, Zanganeh said in an interview published Saturday by the semi-official Khabar Online news site.

Zanganeh dismissed suggestions the contracts had been delayed, saying signing oil contracts takes time. It needs negotiation. He said he expected the first contract with a foreign company to be signed in the next two or three months or maybe sooner."

With economic sanctions lifted in January after Iran pledged to use its nuclear program for peaceful purposes, the government is hoping to draw as much as $50 billion of foreign investment a year from major oil companies such as Italys Eni SpA and Frances Total SA. The oil ministry spent the past two years on a new model contract.

Zanganeh said the changes in contract language so far involve mostly legal issues. The ministry removed a clause that would let the National Iranian Oil Co. offer an alternative, similar field for exploration if a foreign company failed to make a discovery in its initial site, according to the Khabar Online interview.
Domestic Reserves
The text was revised after regulators sought to make clear domestic reserves belonged to the state, Zanganeh said. Changes also were made to reflect demands that major decisions by the managerial committee of any joint venture be approved by the national oil company.

At a Tehran conference in November, officials identified the oil fields Iran intended to offer to foreign operators under the terms of the new agreements while also announcing their general terms.

The final contracts have been delayed since first announced in February 2014, as Iran has sought feedback from potential foreign partners and government regulators. They were originally scheduled to be introduced at a London conference that was postponed indefinitely last month after several delays.

By BloomBerg
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