Iran's Foundation for the Disinheritedwants in on South Pars
Oil ministry officials are opposing a bid by one of Iran's richest and most powerful state foundations to help
develop the giant South Pars gas field. The massive Foundation for the Disinherited is trying to negotiate a contract
for later phases of the development of South Pars. But some ministry experts are arguing that a deal "cannot be
signed with firms that have no experience in the sector."
Iran signed a $ 3.8 bn buy-back contract with Italy's ENI to develop South Pars in what is believed to be the biggest
deal between Tehran and a foreign company since the 1979 Islamic revolution. The deal between ENI and Petro-Pars, an
Iranian firm registered in Britain, puts Italy among Iran's leading partners in the energy sector.
Oil Minister Bijan Namdar-Zanganeh said at the signing ceremony that the deal "opens a new chapter in our relations
with a major western firm and opens the way to concluding new oil and gas contracts with Iran." Iran has the second
largest gas reserves in the world after Russia, estimated at 20 tcm (700 tcf). The Foundation for the Disinherited
controls the extensive holdings of the former shah, who was deposed in the revolution that brought the Islamic clergy
to power.
