• About Us
  • Subscription
  • Contact Us
Friday, May 30, 2025
  • Login
Iran Times
  • Home
  • What’s the News
    • All
    • baygani
    Shah’s Grand Daughter Weds American In New York

    Shah’s Grand Daughter Weds American In New York

    Fruit Peddler To Hang For His Protest Poetry From Buying Texas Land

    Fruit Peddler To Hang For His Protest Poetry From Buying Texas Land

    UK Arrests Two Bands Of Iranians For Plotting Attacks

    UK Arrests Two Bands Of Iranians For Plotting Attacks

    Storms Pound Many Parts Of Iran, Killing Nine

    Storms Pound Many Parts Of Iran, Killing Nine

    Snatch And Grab Thievery Now All The Rage

    Snatch And Grab Thievery Now All The Rage

    Cousin Murders TV Hostess For Her Wealth

    Iranian Student In Alabama To Self-Deport Despite Withdrawal of Initial

    Iranian Student In Alabama To Self-Deport Despite Withdrawal of Initial

    Novel Tells Story Of Five Women In A Family That Leaves Iran For America

    Novel Tells Story Of Five Women In A Family That Leaves Iran For America

    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

  • Diaspora
  • Economy
    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Revolutionary Goals, Iran’s Exports Still Mostly Oil-Based

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    The Oil Patch

    The Oil Patch

  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest

    Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

    Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

    Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

    Jamshid Myth

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Subsidized Currency Stays

    Crypto Crackdown Seen as Fueling Rial Collapse

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • What’s the News
    • All
    • baygani
    Shah’s Grand Daughter Weds American In New York

    Shah’s Grand Daughter Weds American In New York

    Fruit Peddler To Hang For His Protest Poetry From Buying Texas Land

    Fruit Peddler To Hang For His Protest Poetry From Buying Texas Land

    UK Arrests Two Bands Of Iranians For Plotting Attacks

    UK Arrests Two Bands Of Iranians For Plotting Attacks

    Storms Pound Many Parts Of Iran, Killing Nine

    Storms Pound Many Parts Of Iran, Killing Nine

    Snatch And Grab Thievery Now All The Rage

    Snatch And Grab Thievery Now All The Rage

    Cousin Murders TV Hostess For Her Wealth

    Iranian Student In Alabama To Self-Deport Despite Withdrawal of Initial

    Iranian Student In Alabama To Self-Deport Despite Withdrawal of Initial

    Novel Tells Story Of Five Women In A Family That Leaves Iran For America

    Novel Tells Story Of Five Women In A Family That Leaves Iran For America

    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

    Canada Party Boss Says Iran’s Leaders Are ‘Liars’

  • Diaspora
  • Economy
    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Banks Must Keep More Money On Hand

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Russian Says Iran Watermelons Unsafe

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

    Iran Not To Be Self-Sufficient In Wheat This Year

    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Opec Pumps More Crude, Just When Its Not Needed

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Lithium Deposits Being Hyped By Some in Iran

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Trump, Iran Sells China More Oil

    Despite Revolutionary Goals, Iran’s Exports Still Mostly Oil-Based

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    Trump Hits Iran With 10% Tariff On Next-To-No Trade

    The Oil Patch

    The Oil Patch

  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest

    Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

    Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

    Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

    Jamshid Myth

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Two Cabinet Ministers Convicted in $3.4B Case of Corruption at Tea Firm

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Resolution in US House Would Very Quietly Endorse Mojahedin-e Khalq

    Subsidized Currency Stays

    Crypto Crackdown Seen as Fueling Rial Collapse

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

    Iran no Longer Advances Clocks at Now Ruz

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
No Result
View All Result
Iran Times
No Result
View All Result

New team signs obscure gas deal with Oman government

SPLENDOR — President Rohani (right) receives Omani Sultan Qaboos in royal splendor not seen in Tehran in recent decades.  Qaboos is the first chief of state to visit Iran since Rohani became president.  Media rumors said Qaboos was coming with an offer from President Obama, but officials quickly scotched that idea.
SPLENDOR — President Rohani (right) receives Omani Sultan Qaboos in royal splendor not seen in Tehran in recent decades. Qaboos is the first chief of state to visit Iran since Rohani became president. Media rumors said Qaboos was coming with an offer from President Obama, but officials quickly scotched that idea.

In its first effort to boost oil and gas exports, the new Rohani Administration has just signed an agreement with Oman to sell it natural gas, which would make Oman only the third country in the world buying Iranian gas.
The deal could also punch a big hole in the Western sanctions’ effort to box in Iran and curtail its energy exports.
But, the deal that was signed Monday was not a contract, not even a memorandum of understanding (MOU). It was a “heads of agreement,” according to Shana, the news service of Iran’s Oil Ministry.
A heads of agreement is essentially a checklist of issues that must be resolved. It means the two countries have not yet reached agreement on the terms of the deal—and may never reach full agreement.
The agreement signed Monday is the third preliminary gas agreement Iran has signed with Oman in the last eight years, but nothing has yet come to a conclusion.
Still, that did not stop new Oil Minister Bijan Namdar-Zanganeh from hailing the document as a major development only 12 days into his term in office.
In fact, the short time span suggests either that the heads of agreement was negotiated before Zanganeh took office or that it was thrown together at the last minute and doesn’t add much, if anything, to the two previous gas agreements signed with Oman.
It appears intended chiefly to give the appearance of rapid progress, without actually involving any progress.
Omani Oil and Gas Minister Mohammad bin Hamad Ar-Rumhy described the heads of agreement as an effort to revive the stalled agreements signed over the last eight years. “The agreement that we signed yesterday was to go back to those ideas [in the earlier agreements] and see how we can develop them into real projects.”
According to Zanganeh, the new agreement sets a target of 2015 for Iran to begin exporting gas to Oman through an undersea pipeline as part of a 25-year deal that Zanganeh valued at around $60 billion over those 25 years. However, he did not reveal the price formula—or even say that a price formula had been agreed to.
In 2001, during his previous tenure as oil minister, Zanganeh signed a 25-year gas export agreement with the UAE’s Crescent Petroleum Co. Despite the passage of a dozen years, nothing has come of that since the two parties could never agree on a sale price.
Energy-hungry Oman first signed an agreement to buy gas from Iran as far back as 2005 and a later draft deal in 2007 included plans for Oman to process Iranian gas for export as liquefied natural gas (LNG).
But the two sides never finalized the terms during the Ahmadi-nejad Administration.
Oman has been pressured by the United States to get gas from other suppliers such as Qatar, according to US embassy cables released by WikiLeaks. The fact that Oman signed even a heads of agreement means it is fully prepared to stiff the United States—if it can reach agreement on terms with Iran.
Oman has warmer relations with Iran than any other Arabian Peninsula country. But it also has warm relations with the United States, is a firm supporter of the US military presence in the region and allows the US Air Force to use three airfields in Oman.
Oman began importing Qatari gas in 2007, but Omani domestic demand has risen rapidly since, threatening its LNG exports and pushing Muscat back to the negotiating table with Tehran.
The first step under the new agreement is very preliminary. Zanganeh said, “I have been delegated to choose an eligible Iranian consultant to examine issues like technical and economic feasibility of [an undersea] gas pipeline project as well as determining its route. The next steps will be taken after announcing the results of those studies….
“We can start implementation of the project, mainly because top executives of the two countries insist that the project should be implemented as soon as possible,” Shana quoted Zanganeh as saying after the signing ceremony during the visit to Tehran by Omani ruler Sultan Qaboos.
But Zanganeh mentioned in passing, “We also discussed issues like financing the gas pipeline project.” That means such a basic issue as financing remains up in the air.
Iran sits on the world’s second largest gas reserves, but it has been prevented from exporting much because western sanctions have slammed the brakes on its LNG export projects. Iran currently exports large quantities of gas only to Turkey plus small quantities to Armenia. And those exports are of plain gas through pipes. Iran cannot yet convert any natural gas to LNG, which is required to put gas into tankers to send it long distances.
Oman has plants able to produce up to 10.4 million tons of LNG a year but has not produced more than 8.8 million in the last five years; and output fell to 8.4 million in 2012, according to Oman LNG’s latest annual report.
According to a working copy of the 2007 agreement between the two countries, in addition to imports of 1 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) of gas from Iran for sale in Oman, Oman would allocate 2 million metric tons per year in excess capacity at its Oman LNG plant to process Iranian gas for export. The copy of that agreement was obtained by the US embassy in Muscat according to a 2007 cable leaked to WikiLeaks.
It is very unlikely that the big European shareholders of the Omani LNG plant—Shell and Total—would agree to liquefy Iranian gas while EU sanctions are in place.

Previous Post

Malekpour sentenced to life in prison after appeal

Next Post

Secret US policy is freezing some Muslim citizen filings

Related Posts

Latest

Drone Attack That Killed 3 US Troops in Jordan Could Have Been Foiled

Latest

Iranian-Canadians Reportedly Turned Away at US Border

Latest

Iranian-Americans: an Account of Integration and Achievement

Next Post
Secret US policy is freezing some Muslim citizen filings

Secret US policy is freezing some Muslim citizen filings

Rohani consciously buries rhetoric

Rohani consciously buries rhetoric

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription
  • Culture
  • Economy
Call us: +1 (202)-659-9868

© 1970-2025 Iran Times - ‬An‭ ‬Independent‭ ‬Newspaper

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • What’s the News
  • Diaspora
  • Economy
  • Tidbits and Morsels
  • Latest
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscription

© 1970-2025 Iran Times - ‬An‭ ‬Independent‭ ‬Newspaper

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
Go to mobile version