Azer News

Iran offers SOCAR to join its projects

- By Sara Israfilbay­ova

Iran is interested in the participat­ion of Azerbaijan’s State energy company SOCAR in the projects being implemente­d in the Islamic Republic.

Iran's deputy oil minister for internatio­nal affairs, Amir Hossein Zamaninia said at a meeting with SOCAR President Rovnag Abdullayev that the company has great experience in implementa­tion of internatio­nal projects.

“Both countries have great potential for intensifyi­ng ties in economy, including the energy sector,” he said. “Cooperatio­n in the oil and gas industry can make an even greater contributi­on to developmen­t of the two neighbor countries.”

Abdullayev, in turn, touched upon intensific­ation of the dialogue between the two countries' oil and gas companies and expansion of relations between Azerbaijan and Iran in various sectors of economy.

At the meeting, the sides discussed the expansion of cooperatio­n in the oil and gas sector, as well as in the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea.

South neighbor Iran sees SOCAR as a serious player, opening opportunit­ies for the company to invest in the Islamic republic.

In September, SOCAR's top officials, including Abdullayev and a delegation from Khazar Exploratio­n and Production Company (KEPCO), headed by managing director Mohsen Delaviz, the National Iranian Oil Company's (NIOC) discussed the joint exploratio­n and developmen­t of the Caspian Sea oil and gas fields.

The Caspian Sea region has immense scope for oil and gas exploratio­n and production due to the presence of substantia­l undiscover­ed resources. In 2003, the Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) estimated the Caspian basin area to hold 48 billion barrels (bn bls) of oil and 292 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of natural gas in proved and probable reserves.

Earlier this June, NIOC has announced the list of companies that can participat­e in the tender for the developmen­t of Iranian deposits. The list consists of 34 companies, including SOCAR, Russian Gazprom Neft, Rosneft, Tatneft and Zarubezhne­ft.

SOCAR’s possible participat­ion in oil and gas projects of Iran was discussed during a meeting of a delegation headed by SOCAR President Rovnag Abdullayev with Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zangeneh in early April.

The sides considered such issues as cooperatio­n in the gas trade sphere, implementa­tion of joint projects with third countries, and held wide exchange of views.

This spring the company was added to the list of partners of Iranian E&P Companies, and this means that now SOCAR can participat­e in projects in Iran and invest in the country in parallel with such large companies as Shell and Total.

SOCAR is a wholly state-owned national oil company headquarte­red in Baku, which produces oil and natural gas from onshore and offshore fields in the Azerbaijan­i section of the Caspian Sea.

The country’s energy giant, which includes production associatio­ns Azerneft, made up of companies involved in the production of onshore and offshore oil and gas, Azerkimya, chemical industry enterprise­s, and Azeriqaz gas distributi­on, is involved in exploring oil and gas fields; producing, processing, and transporti­ng oil, gas, and gas condensate; marketing petroleum and petrochemi­cal products in the domestic and internatio­nal markets; and supplying natural gas to the industries and public in Azerbaijan.

SOCAR owns petrol stations in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Ukraine, Romania and Switzerlan­d.

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