Iran Pushes to Expand Flare-Gas Recovery, Accelerate Value-Chain Projects at Bidboland Complex – NPC Chief

Iran Pushes to Expand Flare-Gas Recovery, Accelerate Value-Chain Projects at Bidboland Complex – NPC Chief
(Saturday, December 6, 2025) 13:46

TEHRAN, Dec. 5 (NIPNA) – Iran is advancing efforts to fully integrate flare-gas recovery and value-chain development at the Bidboland Persian Gulf Gas Refining Complex, a key national project now operating at 80% feedstock capacity, the head of the National Petrochemical Company (NPC) said on Friday.

Hassan Abbasszadeh, deputy petroleum minister and NPC managing director, told lawmakers visiting the complex that Bidboland is the largest flare-gas gathering project in the country and a critical supplier of feedstock to downstream petrochemical plants.

Abbasszadeh said the project has already brought most of its processing capacity online and will reach full operation once remaining flare-gas connections are completed. “This facility is central to the petrochemical sector’s drive for growth, efficiency and value creation,” he said.

According to NPC data, roughly 600 million cubic feet per day of associated gas is being collected. Abbasszadeh said the initiative is among the priority directives of the president and oil minister to ensure that valuable flare gas enters the national production chain instead of being burned.

He noted progress on a major propane-to-propylene project adjacent to the complex, financed partly through foreign-currency Islamic Murabaha bonds. The unit, he said, will support employment and curb the export of unprocessed hydrocarbons. Polypropylene, its downstream output, is considered a strategic petrochemical product with an extensive value chain.

$5b Invested in Bidboland Projects

Total investment across the Bidboland chain has surpassed USD 5 billion, Abbasszadeh said. He added that flare-gas gathering and transmission alone — excluding processing facilities — required USD 1.1 billion. Some flare stacks connected to the network date back more than 70 years and have required long pipeline routes and extensive compressor installations.

So far, gas from 57 flare stacks has been integrated into the network, with 14 fully extinguished and routed to processing. Remaining units will be connected by the end of next year, he said. The project, he added, makes a significant contribution to Iran’s commitments to carbon-emissions reduction.

1.5 Bcf/d of Gas to Be Captured Across Four Major Projects

Abbasszadeh said four principal flare-gas gathering schemes — including Bidboland, the Persian Gulf Gas Refinery, a regional project in Behbahan and Khuzestan, and a program to improve flare performance and supply feedstock to Maroon Petrochemical — will collectively capture 1.5 billion cubic feet of gas per day, equal to 42 million cubic metres. He said the Persian Gulf project alone is now collecting 240 million cubic feet per day and supplying plants in Bandar Imam.

Feedstock Shortage Leaves 22% of Industry Idle

Feedstock remains the top challenge in the seventh development plan for the petrochemical sector, Abbasszadeh said, noting that 22% of production capacity is currently idle due to insufficient supply. Flare-gas recovery, he added, is the most reliable long-term solution.

He said the industry met all its obligations in the first year of the plan. Ten of 15 expansion projects targeted for the current year have already been completed, with one more due by June.

Abbasszadeh cited additional measures to free up natural gas, including demand-management programs in colder provinces and LNG-swap strategies to reduce power-plant consumption.

Weekly Presidential Oversight, Broad Local Impact

The NPC chief said the president holds weekly meetings with senior oil-industry officials to accelerate flare-gas projects, a level of attention that has helped speed progress.

He added that extensive deployments of technical teams across Rag-e Sefid, Ahvaz, Omidieh and other hubs have generated significant direct and indirect employment, stimulating industrial and service-sector activity across Khuzestan.

Calling flare-gas recovery a “major gift” to the province, Abbasszadeh said the initiative will not only secure feedstock for petrochemical plants but also cut air pollution in one of Iran’s most environmentally sensitive regions.

 


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