Tehran has announced its intention to import gas from Russia. This caused an uproar in Iranian circles. According to the latest statistics released in 2021, Iran is the third largest natural gas producer in the world after the United States and Russia.
Russia is Iran's main rival in the oil and gas sector. After Western sanctions against Russia, Beijing reportedly switched to buying Russian oil. As a result, Tehran lost China, an export destination for Iranian oil, during the period of Western sanctions. At this point in time, however, Moscow seems to be more interested in friendship than competition in the energy sector.
According to the Iranian Oil Ministry's report, the gas produced by Russia is estimated to be between 75 and 95 billion cubic meters, but the export destination is not specified. In the report, Iran's Oil Ministry described this as a golden opportunity for Iran to import Russian gas through Turkmenistan. It specified that the gas would be transported from Russia to Turkmenistan via the gas transmission line, and then to Iran via two transmission lines with a capacity of 20 billion cubic meters.
Ahmed Asadzadeh, deputy minister for international affairs and trade at Iran's oil minister, said Iran and Russia were in talks with Oman or Pakistan on trilateral cooperation.
Russian natural gas
Iran holds 18% of the world's total gas reserves and has 22 oil refineries that produce 1 billion cubic meters of gas per day. Nevertheless, it announced that the country's natural gas consumption will exceed its production in the coming winter.
In response, Bahman Arman, a university professor and expert on economic affairs, told Al Jazeera that Iran produces less than 200 million cubic meters of gas in winter, so imports from Turkmenistan are needed to make up the shortfall. He also said Tehran would need significant investment to transport Russian gas from northern Russia to the Iranian border, thousands of kilometers away.
On the other hand, IRNA, which has close ties to the government and security agencies, said Tehran was able to buy Russian gas at a "suitable price" and put it into use in the northern region. That way, it does not have to transport gas from the south, where it is produced, to the north. At the same time, it will also be able to export its gas in the south at higher prices to neighboring countries such as Pakistan and Oman, or increase gas exports to Iraq and Turkey.
However, economic expert Bachman Arman believes that Iran's import of Russian gas and then export of it is "nothing more than a joke", in fact, it is related to the fact that Iran's gas exports are either exported on a small and limited scale to Turkey and Iraq through the gas pipeline it relies on, or the gas is converted into liquefied gas.
He stressed that Iran and Russia do not have the technology. In addition, transporting natural gas from Russia to Iran is costly.
In this context, Arman mentioned the role of the United States in this regard. He said Iran has built a 56-inch diameter pipeline to transport natural gas from Assaluya (southern Iran) to Pakistan. This is the largest gas pipeline that can be manufactured in the world, but the United States does not allow Pakistan to import Iranian gas. Tehran also burns natural gas from oil exploration in the waters of the Gulf and Khuzestan province, he said.
Arman believes that Russia has a lot of influence in Iran because Tehran was supposed to create a gas transmission line from Assaluya to the Bazargan border to separate Iran from Turkey and then into Turkey. But the line only extends from Assaluya to Iranian Kurdistan. And according to him, the project is not finished. Because Russia knows that Tehran has the largest gas reserves in the world and can compete with Moscow in the market.
In this context, energy expert Hamid Reda Shakouhi, speaking to Al Jazeera, argued that in the short term, it would be logical for Iran to import natural gas to fill the shortage problems it faces. But in the long term it must invest in gas fields and find ways to increase gas production and reduce consumption. He explained that consumption is not only for households, and Iran must adopt policies to reduce gas consumption in factories and petrochemical enterprises.
This is despite Iran's announcement that Phase 14 of the South Pars gas field will go ahead in 2022. But Shakushi ruled out the possibility that the project would be completed before next winter.
Impact of sanctions
In this regard, the impact of sanctions cannot be avoided. As Arman said, Iran has been trying for more than 30 years to build a natural gas liquefaction plant in the Phase 11 project at the South Pars oil field, but has failed to do so. The reason is that few companies have this technology, although Iran signed a contract with France's Total, but the company pulled out of the implementation of the deal due to Western sanctions.
Arman also said that Iran has not explored any gas, oil or iron fields since the 1979 revolution until today because it does not have the necessary technical conditions. And before the revolution, all of these areas of Iran were explored by American companies.
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