Ministry of Petroleum (Iran) explained

Agency Name:Ministry of Petroleum
Nativename:وزارت نفت
Seal:Flag of the Ministry of Petroleum (Iran).svg
Jurisdiction:Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Headquarters:Tehran, Iran
Employees:104,373 (2019)[1]
Minister1 Name:Javad Owji
Child1 Agency:
Child2 Agency:
Child3 Agency:
Child4 Agency:
Footnotes:Official MoP Youtube channel

The Ministry of Petroleum (MOP) (Persian: وزارت نفت|Vezârat-e Naft) manages the oil industry, the producer of oil and petrochemical products. MoP is in charge of all issues pertaining to exploration, extraction, exploitation, distribution and exportation of crude oil and oil products. In addition, according to the "Imports and Exports Regulation Act", issuing import licenses for such products is also among the functions of the Ministry of Petroleum.[2] The ministry has been placed under sanctions by the United States Department of State as of 2020.[3]

According to BP, Iran's has 137.6Goilbbl of proven oil reserves and 29.61 trillion cubic meters of proven gas reserves. Iran ranks third in the world in oil reserves and second in gas reserves. It is responsible for applying the principle of Iranian ownership and sovereignty over oil and gas reserves. Also, it is undertake the separation of sovereignty tasks from management and development of country's oil and gas industry.

The Ministry of petroleum was established after revolution in Iran and in the interim government of Bazargan, after departure of Hasan Nazia, the managing director of National Iranian Oil Company from the country in 1979. The organizational structure of this ministry consists of a central headquarters and four subsidiaries, including National Iranian Oil Company, National Iranian Gas Company, National Iranian Petrochemical Company and National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company. It monitors the operations of exploration, extraction, marketing and sale of crude oil, natural gas and oil products in the country through its subsidiaries. In addition to meeting its major energy needs, the ministry supplies over 80% of foreign currency earnings by exporting crude oil and refined petroleum products.

According to the Fourth Economic, Social and Cultural Development Plan, the Government has been required to transfer at least 10% of the activities related to the exploration, extraction and production of crude oil to the private sector, while in the meantime retaining its ownership of oil resources. This is also the case in other fields of the Ministry of Petroleum's activities.[2]

Iran plans to invest $500 billion in the oil sector until 2025.[4] As of 2010, US$70 billion worth of oil and gas projects were under construction. Iran's annual oil and gas revenues were expected to reach $250 billion by 2015.[5]

History

The Ministry of petroleum of Islamic Republic of Iran was formed with the aim of applying the principle of Iranian national ownership and sovereignty to oil and gas resources, and separating sovereignty functions from company in the management and development of oil and gas industry of the country. Since the petroleum industry has a special role in the country's economy as a propellant industry and plays a key role in achieving the major goals of national economy, the ministry's performance is very important.

Iran holds 836.47 billion barrels of liquid hydrocarbon reserves (crude oil, liquids and gas condensate) and about 34 trillion gas reserves. It is ranked first in the world in terms of having a total hydrocarbon reserves and in terms of energy security in the world. Also, the privileges like geopolitical position of the country and availability of powerful human capital have given it more strength.

The National Petroleum Procurement Proposal was signed by 17 representatives of National Petroleum Commission on 8 December 1950. In the text of message was following: "we are proposing for Iranian oil industry to be announced in all regions of the country without exception under the name of well-being of Iranian people and in order to contribute to peace of the world: all exploration, extraction and exploitation operations be in the control of government."[6]

Following the announcement of this proposal, "the law of oil Nationalization throughout the country and two-month extension to Petroleum Commission to study around implementation of this principle" passed in National Assembly and eventually in the Senate on 29 March 1950. Thus, The National Iranian Oil Company was established.

First board of directors of National Iranian Oil Company was constituted by implementing the law of oil industry nationalization and after expropriation of former British oil company in June 1951. Then, new rules were adopted for this new company.

The legal framework for activities of National Iranian Oil Company in discussion of hydrocarbons sources and its products was determined by approving the "Law on Development of Petrochemical Industries (with subsequent amendments)" on 20 July 1965 and the "Law on Development of Gas Industry" on 25 May 1972. In addition, the extent of Iranian or foreign companies and firms has clarified to participate in petrochemical product plans.

Finally, a detailed description of presenting and receiving proposals, signing contracts, contract termination, conservation and preventing environmental pollution, maintaining Iran's interests and pricing conditions were presented by the approval of first "Oil Act" on 8 August 1974, in addition to defining the terms and conditions of work within hydrocarbon resources of whole country.

Upon approval of first "Oil Act", the "Law on Statute of National Iranian Oil Company" was ratified in five seasons on 17 May 1977.

"General and capital", "subject, duties, rights and authorities of company", "the entity of company", "balance sheet and profit and loss account" have formed first four chapters of the statute. In the fifth chapter of this law is also addressed to "other regulations".

Subsequently, the "Statute of National Petrochemical Company" and "Statute of National Iranian Gas Company" were approved on 21 November, and 25 November 1977, respectively.

After Islamic Revolution of Iran, the editing and approval of new laws were also on the agenda of Islamic Consultative Assembly with the necessity of following some principles and with regard to departure of foreign experts. Hence, new oil law was approved on 9 October 1987.

Oil law

Following the announcement of this proposal, "the law of oil Nationalization throughout the country and two-month extension to Petroleum Commission to study around implementation of this principle" passed in National Assembly and eventually in the Senate on 29 March 1950. Thus, The National Iranian Oil Company was established.

First board of directors of National Iranian Oil Company was constituted by implementing the law of oil industry nationalization and after expropriation of former British oil company in June 1951. Then, new rules were adopted for this new company.

The legal framework for activities of National Iranian Oil Company in discussion of hydrocarbons sources and its products was determined by approving the "Law on Development of Petrochemical Industries (with subsequent amendments)" on 20 July 1965 and the "Law on Development of Gas Industry" on 25 May 1972. In addition, the extent of Iranian or foreign companies and firms has clarified to participate in petrochemical product plans.

Finally, a detailed description of presenting and receiving proposals, signing contracts, contract termination, conservation and preventing environmental pollution, maintaining Iran's interests and pricing conditions were presented by the approval of first "Oil Act" on 8 August 1974, in addition to defining the terms and conditions of work within hydrocarbon resources of whole country.

Upon approval of first "Oil Act", the "Law on Statute of National Iranian Oil Company" was ratified in five seasons on 17 May 1977.

"General and capital", "subject, duties, rights and authorities of company", "the entity of company", "balance sheet and profit and loss account" have formed first four chapters of the statute. In the fifth chapter of this law is also addressed to "other regulations".

Subsequently, the "Statute of National Petrochemical Company" and "Statute of National Iranian Gas Company" were approved on 21 November, and 25 November 1977, respectively.

After Islamic Revolution of Iran, the editing and approval of new laws were also on the agenda of Islamic Consultative Assembly with the necessity of following some principles and with regard to departure of foreign experts. Hence, new oil law was approved on 9 October 1987.

Ministers

!No.!Portrait!Name!Took office!Leftoffice!Party!Head of government
1Ali Akbar Moinfar29 September 197928 May 1980Mehdi Bazargan
2Mohammad Javad Tondguyan25 September 1980 17 August 1981Independent politicianMohammad-Ali Rajai
3Mohammad Gharazi17 August 198128 October 1985IndependentMohammad-Javad Bahonar
Mir-Hossein Mousavi
4Gholam Reza Aghazadeh28 October 1985 20 August 1997Islamic Republican Party
Mir-Hossein MousaviAkbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
5Bijan Namdar Zangeneh20 August 1997 24 August 2005Executives of Construction PartyMohammad Khatami
6Kazem Vaziri Hamaneh11 December 2005 12 August 2007IndependentMahmoud Ahmadinejad
7Gholam-Hossein Nozari14 November 20073 September 2009
8Masoud Mir Kazemi3 September 200916 May 2011Front of Islamic Revolution Stability
9Rostam Ghasemi3 August 2011 15 August 2013Independent
10Bijan Namdar Zangeneh15 August 201325 August 2021Executives of Construction PartyHassan Rouhani
11Javad Owji25 August 202119 May 2024Ebrahim Raisi

Constitution

See also: Petroleum industry in Iran. The Iranian constitution prohibits the granting of petroleum rights on a concessionary basis or direct equity stake. However, the 1987 Petroleum Law permits the establishment of contracts between the ministry, state companies and "local and foreign national persons and legal entities." Buyback contracts, for instance, are arrangements in which the contractor funds all investments, receives remuneration from the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) in the form of an allocated production share, then transfers operation of the field to NIOC after a set number of years, at which time the contract is completed.

Since the 1979 revolution in Iran, the country has been under constant US unilateral sanctions. The first U.S. sanctions against Iran were formalized in November 1979, and during the hostage crisis, many sanctions were leveled against the Iranian government. By 1987 the import of Iranian goods into the United States had been banned. In 1995, President of the United States Bill Clinton issued Executive Order 12957,[7] banning U.S. investment in Iran's energy sector, followed a few weeks later by Executive Order 12959[7] eliminating all trade and investment and virtually all interaction between the United States and Iran.

Specifically the ministry has been on the sanction list of the European Union since 16 October 2012.[8]

Fifth Development Plan

Features of fifth development plan in oil industry

The features of fifth development plan in oil industry include: a systemic template of a set of interconnected components that interact with each other to exchange data, information, materials and products, and they perform a targeted move. Also, different parts of the plan have been coordinated and have been seen as a value chain in industry as a whole.

The major goals of Iran's oil and gas industry in fifth development plan

Objective 1: increase the share and improve position of oil, gas and petrochemical industry in the region and the world, to increase extraction of oil and gas with priority of common fields with neighboring countries, increasing refining capacity

Objective 2: Optimum use of hydrocarbon reserves of the country as backing and stimulus for sustainable economic development of the country.

Objective 3: Use of oil and gas industry capacity to defend national interest

Objective 4: Implement energy management to prevent waste in the country's fuel consumption, reducing energy intensity and granting targeted subsidies

Objective 5: Establishing effective and constructive interaction with energy producer and consumer countries; playing management role of Iran in energy distribution and transit.

Objective 6: Realizing the general policies of article 44 of the constitution in oil industry

Objective 7: Achieve advanced technology in oil, gas and petrochemical industries to reach the second position of science and technology in the region.

Objective 8: Changing the look to oil and gas and its revenues, from source of public funding to "economic productive resources and capitals"

Objective 9: Increase productivity in various sectors of oil industry in order to grow GDP (Gross Domestic Product)

Subsidiaries

National Iranian Oil Company

National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) is in charge of oil and gas exploration and production, processing and oil transportation.[9] National Iranian South Oil Company (NISOC) is an important subsidiary of NIOC. NISOC is producing about 83% percent of all crude oil and 16% percent of natural gas produced in Iran.

National Iranian Oil Company subsidiaries:

National Iranian Gas Company

National Iranian Gas Company (NIGC) manages gathering, treatment, processing, transmission, distribution, and exports of gas and gas liquids.

The huge reserves of natural gas put Iran in the second place, in terms of the natural gas reserve quantity, among other countries, only next to the Russian Federation, with an estimate of proven reserve quantity close to 23 bcm.[2] Iran's gas reserves are exploited primarily for domestic use.

National Iranian Petrochemical Company

National Iranian Petrochemical Company (NPC) handles petrochemical production, distribution, and exports. National Iranian Petrochemical Company's output capacity will increase to over 100 million tpa by 2015 from an estimated 50 million tpa in 2010 thus becoming the world' second largest chemical producer globally after Dow Chemical with Iran housing some of the world's largest chemical complexes.[10] [11] [12]

National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company

National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company (NIORDC) handles oil refining and transportation, with some overlap to NIOC.

There are eight refineries with a potential capacity of 950000oilbbl/d and one refinery complex in the country with a total refining capacity of over 15koilbbl/d (in Tehran, Tabriz, Isfahan, Abadan, Kermanshah, Shiraz, Bandar Abbas, Arak and Lavan Island) and a storage capacity of 8 milliard litre. Abundance of basic material, like natural gas, in the country provide favorable conditions for development and expansion of petrochemical plants.

Production companies

Technical Services Companies

Revenues from crude oil

See also: Iranian targeted subsidy plan, Supreme Audit Court of Iran and National Development Fund. Iran's total revenues from the sale of oil amounted to $77 billion in Iranian year 1387 (2008–09).[13] The average sale price of Iran's crude oil during that year was $100 per barrel.[13] According to the National Iranian Oil Company, Iran's average daily production of crude oil stood at 4Moilbbl per day. Of this amount, 55% was exported and the remainder was consumed domestically.[13] As of 2010, oil income accounts for 80% of Iran's foreign currency revenues and 60% of the nation's overall budget.Iran exported over 844Moilbbl of oil in the one year to 21 March 2010, averaging around 2.3Moilbbl a day. The exports included around 259Moilbbl of light crude and more than 473Moilbbl of heavy crude oil. Japan, China, South Africa, Brazil, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Spain, India and the Netherlands are the main importers of Iran's crude oil. Iran's annual oil revenues reached $100 billion in 2011.[14] Iran's annual oil and gas revenues are expected to reach $250 billion by 2015,[5] including $100 billion from Iran's South Pars giant gas field.

Alleged missing oil revenues

Foreign currency proceeds from crude sales are managed by the Central Bank. According to Farda newspaper, the difference between President Ahmadinejad administration's revenues and the amount deposited with the Central Bank of Iran exceeds $66 billion.[15] This amount is broken down as follows:

  1. $35 billion in imported goods (2005–2009),
  2. $25 billion in oil revenues (2005–2008),[16]
  3. $2.6 billion in non-oil export revenues,
  4. $3 billion in foreign exchange reserves.

This is a large number as it is equal one-tenth of Iran's total oil revenues since the 1979 revolution.

Reserves and production

See also: Oil reserves in Iran and Natural gas reserves in Iran.

Proven oil reserves!Country!Billions of Barrels
Saudi Arabia262.7
Canada178.9
Iran133.3
Iraq112.5
United Arab Emirates97.8
Kuwait96.5
Venezuela75.6
Top oil producers!Country!Millions of Barrels
Saudi Arabia9.5
Russia9.2
United States7.6
Iran4.0
China3.5
European Union3.4
Mexico3.4

Public projects

See also: Construction in Iran. As of 2012, the Ministry of Petroleum in Iran handles 4,000 public (non-oil) projects across the country. The estimated value of the projects stands at 53,868 trillion rials (approximately $4 trillion).[17]

Sanctions

The Ministry of Petroleum, in accordance with the US Executive Order 13876, was placed under sanctions by the United States Department of State in October 2020 and has been designated as Specially Designated Global Terrorist due to its alleged links with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps for supplying "oil for terror" in Syria worth millions of dollars.[3] [18] [19]

See also

External links

35.7072°N 51.4116°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: جزییات تعداد کارمندان دولت در سال 97/مدرک دکترای 10 درصد کارمندان وزارت بهداشت- اخبار اقتصادی تسنیم Tasnim . 2022-09-20 . خبرگزاری تسنیم Tasnim . fa.
  2. Web site: irantradelaw.com . 10 June 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130310232210/http://www.irantradelaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Irans-Foreign-Trade-Regime-Report.pdf . 10 March 2013 .
  3. Web site: Sanctions List Search.
  4. Web site: Fars News Agency : مدیرعامل بانک ملت: تقویت تامین مالی پتروشیمی‌ها با راه اندازی یک صندوق جدید. www.farsnews.ir. 2018-05-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20180520054542/https://www.farsnews.ir/printable.php?nn=13930319000390. 20 May 2018. live.
  5. http://www.payvand.com/news/10/dec/1216.html Mehr News Agency: Iran eyes $250 billion annual revenue in 5 years
  6. News: Ministry of petroleum iran. Tarikhema.org. 2018-05-19. fa-IR. https://web.archive.org/web/20180520053938/https://tarikhema.org/contemporary/iranc/22476/ministry-of-petroleum-iran/. 20 May 2018. live.
  7. Web site: Iran Sanctions. 10 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20101203130127/http://www.treas.gov/offices/enforcement/ofac/programs/iran/iran.shtml. 3 December 2010. live.
  8. Web site: Persons referred to at point (2) of Article 1. Official Journal of the EU. 16 February 2013. October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121021092605/http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2012:282:FULL:EN:PDF. 21 October 2012. live.
  9. Web site: Iran - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) . 2012-08-03 . dead . https://archive.today/20120803091645/www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Iran/Profile.html . 3 August 2012.
  10. Web site: NPC Iran will be second largest commodity chemical producer in the world by 2015. | Middle East > Gulf States from AllBusiness.com . 9 February 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090221222403/http://www.allbusiness.com/finance-insurance/credit-intermediation-related-activities/4022282-1.html . 21 February 2009 . live .
  11. Web site: Iran to build 46 new petchem units . 12 January 2010 . 9 February 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110613210148/http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=212109 . 13 June 2011 . live .
  12. Web site: Overview of the Middle East Petrochemical Industry . 2010-01-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110715222433/http://www.sabic.com/corporate/en/newsandmediarelations/speeches/20050330.aspx . 15 July 2011.
  13. Web site: Archived copy . 29 May 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160118064229/http://www.turquoisepartners.com/iraninvestment/IIM-AprMay09.pdf . 18 January 2016 . live .
  14. Web site: Iran oil development fund could reach $55 billion: Ahmedinejad - Yahoo! News . 2012-04-07 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120410015702/http://news.yahoo.com/iran-oil-development-fund-could-reach-55-billion-151751670.html . 10 April 2012.
  15. Web site: Iran: Fate of $66 Billion in Oil Revenues Unknown . Payvand.com . 2012-01-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110604050512/http://www.payvand.com/news/09/oct/1266.html . 4 June 2011 . live .
  16. Web site: Iran's massive oil revenue discrepancies . UPI.com . 2012-01-09 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091126004458/http://www.upi.com/Science_News/Resource-Wars/2009/09/23/Irans-massive-oil-revenue-discrepancies/UPI-38201253740655 . 26 November 2009 . live .
  17. Web site: Fars News Agency :: Oil Ministry Implementing 4,000 Projects .
  18. htt https://iranintl.com/en/iran/irans-new-government-reads-list-sanctioned-persons
  19. News: U.S. Blacklists 'oil for terror' ship network as it raises pressure on IRGC. Reuters. 4 September 2019.