Pars Petchem Chief Says Integrity of Evaluation Process Key to Iran Industry Excellence Award

Pars Petchem Chief Says Integrity of Evaluation Process Key to Iran Industry Excellence Award
(Monday, November 17, 2025) 11:41

TEHRAN, Nov 14 (NIPNA) – The head of Iran’s Pars Petrochemical Co. said the country’s petrochemical excellence award should be viewed as a long-term mechanism for learning and organisational improvement rather than a target in itself, stressing that the credibility of the scheme depends on impartial and independent assessments.


Abdolkarim Pahlavani told a company event attended by managers and assessors from across the sector that the evaluation phase forms the “backbone” of the excellence award and must remain free of personal or financial bias.

Pahlavani said work on developing the national petrochemical excellence model began in 2008 and led to its formal launch in 2010. He noted that while the United States, Japan and Europe established similar awards decades earlier, Iran’s scheme was designed to support both technical development and human-capital growth in the domestic industry.

He said the award was created to strengthen leadership capabilities, build organisational infrastructure and develop managerial skills. Protecting its credibility, he added, requires adherence to the original intent of its founders and strict professional standards.

Pahlavani called for a revision of the award’s policy council to include representatives from major contractors and commercial partners, arguing that contractors are integral to the sector’s expansion and should have a role in shaping the award’s future direction.

He said average organisational maturity scores have risen from 287 out of 1,000 in 2010 to 399 in 2024 – an increase of roughly 40% – but warned that progress has slowed in recent years. He said a detailed review of shortcomings is needed to reinvigorate improvement efforts.

Pahlavani added that chief executives must actively support excellence initiatives for meaningful organisational change to occur, noting that training, evaluation and continuous improvement were central to the award’s original design.

 


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