Energy & Oil

Kharg Island oil loading terminal
Energy

Iran Quietly Expands Oil Sales to Asia, Bypassing Western Sanctions

Iranian crude exports have climbed to their highest level in three years via a sophisticated network of ship-to-ship transfers and flag changes.

South Pars gas field platform, Persian Gulf
Energy

South Pars: The World's Largest Gas Field and Iran's Most Valuable Asset

The South Pars/North Dome field shared with Qatar holds reserves that could transform Iran's economy — if it can ever be fully developed under the shadow of sanctions.

Shazand combined-cycle power plant, Iran
Energy

Iran's Electricity Crisis: Why a Country Sitting on Vast Gas Reserves Faces Rolling Blackouts

Despite enormous fossil fuel resources, Iran suffers severe electricity shortages in summer and winter — a consequence of decades of subsidised prices, underinvestment, and political dysfunction.

Persian Gulf energy infrastructure
Energy

Iran's Renewable Energy Push: Ambition vs. Reality

Tehran has announced ambitious solar and wind energy targets, but financing constraints and institutional inertia have kept the fossil fuel share of the energy mix stubbornly high.

Kharg Island oil terminal
Energy

Iran and Russia in Talks Over Joint LNG Projects as Western Markets Remain Closed

Senior energy officials from Tehran and Moscow have held preliminary discussions about co-developing liquefied natural gas facilities that could export to Asian markets via alternative financial channels.

Shazand power plant
Energy

Iran's Petrochemical Sector Defies Sanctions Pressure with Record Output

Iran's petrochemical industry produced a record volume of goods in the last Iranian fiscal year, with most output finding buyers in China, India, and through intermediary traders in the Gulf.

South Pars gas field platform
Energy

Why Iran Still Flares Billions of Cubic Metres of Natural Gas Each Year

Despite sitting on the world's second-largest natural gas reserves, Iran burns off enormous quantities of gas due to ageing infrastructure, lack of investment, and domestic pricing policies that make capture uneconomic.