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UN Resolution 1737

Iran confirms Total's withdrawal from gas project PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 13 July 2008

ImageTEHRAN (AFP) — Iran's oil minister confirmed on Saturday that French energy giant Total has dropped out of a multi-billion-dollar gas investment in the Islamic republic, the state broadcaster reported.

"In our eye Total is considered out," Gholam Hossein Nozari was quoted as saying on the state broadcaster's website.

"Total's recent move in withdrawing from phase 11 of the South Pars is a completely political move and not a commercial one," Nozari said.

"As soon as we heard this news we started work on this phase with power and will continue powerfully," he added.

The French firm's chief Christophe de Margerie said in an interview published on Thursday that it was too politically risky to invest in Iran at present.

Total, with its expertise, was to develop phase 11 of Iran's giant South Pars gas field to produce liquefied natural gas (LNG) alongside Malaysia's Petronas.

Iranian energy officials had repeatedly said they would go ahead with the phase 11 gas project -- even if they had to abandon the idea of producing LNG -- with other foreign or domestic firms.

Iran has the world's second-largest reserves of natural gas.

The South Pars field in the Gulf has around 500 trillion cubic feet (14 trillion cubic metres) of gas, which represents about eight percent of world reserves.

Iran shares the wider Pars fields with Qatar on the other side of the Gulf.

The development of Iran's giant offshore field has been delayed amid a lack of investment in a country faced with severe gas needs of its own in winter at the same time as planning ambitious gas export projects to Asia and Europe.

Western governments have pressured firms to cut their ties with Iran over the country's controversial nuclear programme, which world powers fear could be aimed at seeking atomic weapons -- a charge vehemently denied by Tehran.

Tensions over the nuclear standoff have surged this week after Iran test-fired a broadside of missiles -- including one it says brings Israel within range -- in war games that provoked international concern.





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In Focus
Iran's nuclear standoff
  • Washington Post: Iran is using 4,000 centrifuges to enrich uranium and plans to install an additional 3,000 of the devices, Deputy Foreign Minister Ali Reza Sheikh Attar said Thursday in an interview on Iranian state television.

  • AP: Iran has increased the number of operating centrifuges at its uranium enrichment plant to 4,000, a top official said Friday, pushing ahead with the nuclear program despite threats of new U.N. sanctions.

  • AP: Iran's official IRNA news agency says the government now has nearly 4,000 centrifuges operating in its uranium enrichment plant.

  • Reuters: U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said on Monday the world must increase pressure on Iran to rein in its nuclear program and avoid a situation where Israel feels cornered.

  • AP: Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama pledged Monday that he would step up diplomatic pressure to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons before Israel feels that "its back is against the wall" and might take military action.

  • New York Sun: On the heels of a breakdown in talks intended by the West to defuse the Iranian nuclear crisis, Iran is planning to build a new nuclear power facility.

  • AP: Iran's official news agency says the country has begun designing its second light-water nuclear power plant, a 360-megawatt facility in the southwest.

  • AFP: Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday praised the country's government for resisting international pressure on the Islamic republic to halt its controversial nuclear programme.

  • Reuters: Iran described talks with a top U.N. inspector over its nuclear program -- which the West fears is a cover to build atomic bombs -- as "positive", the official IRNA news agency reported on Wednesday.

  • AFP: Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation on Tuesday tasked six local companies to hunt for potential sites for new nuclear power plants, the official news agency IRNA reported.

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