Iran says China's CNPC replacing France's Total in gas project
DUBAI (Reuters) - China’s state-owned CNPC has replaced France’s Total in Iran’s multibillion-dollar South Pars gas project, Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh said, according to the semi-official news agency ICANA.
“China’s CNPC has officially replaced Total in phase 11 of South Pars but it has not started work practically. Talks need to be held with CNPC ... about when it will start operations,” Zanganeh told ICANA, without giving further details.
Total, which had a 50.1 percent stake in the project, and CNPC could not immediately be reached for comment.
The French company said in August it had told Iranian authorities it would withdraw from the South Pars gas project after it failed to obtain a waiver from U.S. sanctions against Iran..
In May, industry sources said CNPC was ready to take over Total’s stake in the project.
The offshore field, which Iran calls South Pars and Qatar calls North Field, holds the world’s largest natural gas reserves ever found in one place.
CNPC already holds a 30 percent stake in the giant field, while National Iranian Oil Company subsidiary PetroPars holds the remaining 19.9 percent.
Reporting by Dubai newsroom; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Mark Potter
- Freeport LNG export plant in Texas reports shutdown of liquefaction train
- TotalEnergies and Mozambique announce the full restart of the $20-B Mozambique LNG project
- Five energy market trends to track in 2026, the year of the glut
- RWE strengthens partnerships with ADNOC and Masdar to enhance energy security in Germany and Europe
- Venture Global wins LNG arbitration case brought by Spain's Repsol

Comments