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Total to sign milestone energy deal in Iran for gas field

Tehran - Iran plans on Monday to sign a formal contract with Total SA and China National Petroleum to develop its share of the world’s biggest natural gas field - the first investment in the country by an international energy company since sanctions were eased last year.

Total and CNPC signed a “heads of agreement” with National Iranian Oil in November to develop phase 11 of the South Pars offshore gas field, a deal that was valued then at $4.8bn.

Total chief executive officer Patrick Pouyanne will be in Tehran for the signing of the formal agreement, Parastoo Younchi, the Iranian oil ministry official in charge of foreign media relations, said Sunday.

A Total official confirmed that a 20-year contract with very attractive terms will be signed on Monday. CNPC officials in Beijing declined to comment. Under the preliminary November accord, Total will control 50.1% of the project, while CNPC will have a 30% interest and Iran’s Petropars, 19.9%. 

South Pars is Iran’s section of the world’s biggest gas deposit, shared also with Qatar, and the Persian Gulf field lies at the center of a dispute embroiling Qatar and several Arab neighbors. Saudi Arabia severed commercial links with Qatar last month, accusing it of cozying up to Iran, a Saudi rival.

The planned signing of the South Pars contract will coincide with a deadline for Qatar to comply with 13 demands from the Saudi-led coalition, including a cutback in relations with Iran. Qatar has rejected the ultimatum.

Iran holds the world’s biggest gas reserves, estimated by BP at 1 183 trillion cubic feet (33 trillion cubic meters), and is the third-biggest oil producer in the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

The producer is wooing companies such as Total, Royal Dutch Shell and Russia’s Lukoil PJSC to invest in its oil and gas fields to boost output. Its oil production climbed 33% last year after sanctions related to its nuclear programme were eased in January 2016, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Total in November put the cost of the first part of the South Pars project at $2bn, with Total’s share at $1bn.

The Paris-based company was working on South Pars until sanctions forced it to withdraw in 2009. The Total spokesperson said on Sunday the project is in strict compliance with French and international law, and the produced gas will supply the Iranian domestic market starting in 2021.

CNPC has been present in Iran since 2004, operating in oil, gas and oil field services, according to the company’s website. In 2006, it was awarded a three-year contract to provide offshore well-logging and other services at South Pars.

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