Analysis: Iran Urged to Strengthen Export-Management Capacity to Boost Petchem Competitiveness

Analysis: Iran Urged to Strengthen Export-Management Capacity to Boost Petchem Competitiveness
(Monday, November 17, 2025) 11:41

TEHRAN, Nov 14 (NIPNA) – Countries seeking to expand industrial exports must build strong institutional capabilities and reinforce ties between government and producers, an Iranian petrochemical official said, arguing that effective export management is now a critical factor in global competition.


Mohammad-Javad Saket, head of market research at the National Petrochemical Company’s planning and development division, said exporters require more than production capacity. They must also invest in industrial planning, technological learning and regulatory oversight, he wrote.

Saket highlighted the role of export management companies (EMCs), which operate as export arms for multiple manufacturers, especially firms lacking their own international sales units. He said EMCs typically conduct foreign market studies, identify buyers, manage branding and marketing, and handle logistics, customs procedures, financing and credit-risk management.

According to Saket, EMCs generally fall into three categories: export-sales agents that aggregate demand while leaving risk and invoicing with producers; buy-and-sell distributors that assume pricing authority and commercial risk; and consultants that provide marketing and documentation services without taking ownership of the product.

He said global producers, particularly in commodity segments, increasingly rely on integrated commercial strategies that extend beyond price competition. These include risk-sharing mechanisms, political and economic cooperation agreements, and joint production or investment structures.

Iran’s petrochemical sector, despite having trading arms within major holding groups, still lacks fully integrated commercial planning at the industry level, Saket said. He argued that the gap could be addressed through coordinated trade strategies aligned with the country’s foreign-policy priorities and by establishing clear regulatory tools to support long-term market positioning.

 


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