Innovation No Longer Optional for Industry Survival, Iran Vice President Says

Innovation No Longer Optional for Industry Survival, Iran Vice President Says
(Sunday, December 14, 2025) 11:17

TEHRAN, Dec. 9 (NIPNA)— Innovation is no longer a choice but a prerequisite for the survival of industry, Iran’s vice president for science, technology and the knowledge-based economy said on Tuesday, highlighting the petrochemical sector’s role in the country’s development path.

Speaking at the closing ceremony of the Petrofan 2025 conference, Hossein Afshin said industries that fail to embrace innovation would not endure, as global competition increasingly hinges on data, advanced technologies and speed of decision-making.

“The future is intelligent, and the winner is the one who understands sooner, decides sooner and builds sooner,” Afshin said, describing Iran’s petrochemical industry as entering a major paradigm shift.

He said future industrial power would be shaped not by physical capacity alone, such as storage tanks or distillation towers, but by data depth and the courage to innovate. Afshin noted that Iran has moved beyond a phase where science is valued primarily for academic output, toward one where knowledge must generate economic value.

Afshin said the goals of Iran’s knowledge-based production drive were now materialising in the form of smart factories, optimised processes, predictable risks and innovative value chains.

He called on Khalij Fars Holding, Iran’s largest petrochemical group, to move beyond being solely a producer and become a driver of technological development, value-chain completion and reduced reliance on raw exports. In major global industries, he said, development units function as “the brain of industry” rather than peripheral departments.

Afshin said the vice presidency was working alongside industry as a strategic partner through public-private partnerships, joint investment in strategic technologies, national innovation infrastructure and support for commercialisation.

He also pointed to the creation of one of Iran’s largest industrial venture capital funds by Khalij Fars Holding, saying the fund had started with limited capital and was now moving toward a size of 5 trillion rials.

Afshin said the global petrochemical industry was entering a new era in which artificial intelligence, circular economy models and green technologies were essential, warning that industries that fail to adapt would lose future market share or face regulatory and environmental barriers.

“Petrofan is not just an event,” he said. “It signals the decision of Iran’s petrochemical industry to see the future sooner.”

 


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