Gulf News

Total decision on Iran gas project depends on renewal of US waivers

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Global oil demand will rise to 98.09 million barrels a day this year, compared with production of 98.03 million.

French oil major Total plans to make a final investment decision on a $2 billion (Dh7.34 billion) gas project in Iran by the summer, but the decision hinges on the renewal of US sanctions waivers, the company’s chief executive said yesterday.

Total was the first Western energy company to sign a major deal with Tehran since the lifting of internatio­nal sanctions against Iran. Its project aims to develop South Pars 11, which is part of the world’s largest gasfield.

Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanne said South Pars 11 will be among a couple of projects to be approved by the company to start by the summer, if nothing is modified with regards to the sanctions.

“There are two executive orders that are supposed to be renewed before summer,” he said, explaining that the administra­tion of previous US President Barack Obama had signed waivers suspending the sanctions.

“These are supposed to last about 18 months. So President Trump will have to, or not, renew these sanction waivers,” Pouyanne told journalist­s in Paris.

New US President Donald Trump has said the Iran nuclear deal, which ended a diplomatic standoff between Iran and six world powers over the country’s nuclear policy and opens the way for western investment, was “the worst deal ever negotiated.” US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, a former CEO of Total’s rival ExxonMobil, has called for a full review of the Iran nuclear agreement.

Breach of agreement

Pouyanne said that based on the nuclear deal that was signed, the US government would have to prove that Iran had breached the agreement, for the new Trump-led administra­tion to decide against renewing the waivers.

“So, either the waivers are renewed and as such, respect the Iran nuclear deal, which will allow us to execute the contract and we’ll do so, or they decide to tear up the Iran nuclear agreement,” Pouyanne said.

“In that case, we’ll not be able to work in Iran.”

He added that there was what the new White House would do.

Pouyanne said the decision to go ahead with the gas deal last November was a ‘winwin’ one, and that Total had some guarantees in place that protects the company financiall­y if the project does not go through. uncertaint­y on administra­tion

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