Iran Oil Ministry Unveils Roadmap to Draw Public, Private Investment

Iran Oil Ministry Unveils Roadmap to Draw Public, Private Investment
(Saturday, February 7, 2026) 13:02

TEHRAN, Feb. 7 (NIPNA)— Iran’s ministry of petroleum has rolled out a broad package of financial tools and policy measures aimed at attracting public and private investment into the energy sector, as the government seeks to channel domestic liquidity into oil and gas projects and accelerate production growth.


The initiatives come ahead of the 47th anniversary of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution and during a year officially designated as “Investment for Production.”

Under the administration of President Masoud Pezeshkian, the oil ministry has prioritised wider participation by the private sector and non-governmental investors, seeking to overcome long-standing financing constraints in upstream and downstream projects.

New financial instruments for upstream projects

The National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) has introduced new financing instruments under a revised framework for upstream oil and gas contracts. These include payment commitment certificates, crude oil delivery warrants and commodity deposit certificates backed by crude oil and gas condensate.

The instruments are designed to lower financing costs, improve liquidity and allow investors to use them as collateral in capital markets and financial institutions. An integrated implementation guideline has already been issued, and two companies are currently using the mechanisms to finance field development projects.

Guarantee fund established

To enhance investor confidence, the oil ministry has set up an Oil Industry Guarantee Fund with initial capital of 300 million euros, involving 20 partners including banks, exploration and production companies, the National Development Fund and the Iran Energy Exchange.

The fund will operate independently to issue guarantees for oil sector projects. Its statutes and partnership agreements have been approved, with provisions in place to issue guarantees for shareholders.

Banks and PPPs brought in

NIOC has also invited banks and financial institutions to participate in upstream projects under Article 12 of Iran’s law on financing production and infrastructure. In this framework, Tejarat Bank has signed an agreement to co-finance a processing project at the Ab-Teymour field, with implementation already under way.

Public-private partnership (PPP) models are being used to expand fast-track, skid-mounted processing facilities. Under contracts signed so far, about 12% of Iran’s crude oil processing capacity will be handled by private and non-governmental entities.

According to Amir Moghiseh, NIOC’s director of investment and business development, first-phase PPP contracts cover processing capacity of 115,000 barrels per day across several fields. A second phase includes six contracts for 315,000 barrels per day, valued at $1.67 billion, covering fields such as Mansouri, Ab-Teymour, Ramshir and Karanj.

While conventional processing units can take up to three years to build, skid-mounted facilities can be completed in less than two years, significantly accelerating production, officials said.

Drilling fleet modernisation

The ministry is also targeting investment in drilling through a guaranteed purchase model for rig services. NIOC has offered five-year guaranteed contracts under a build-own-operate (BOO) framework to encourage fleet renewal.

Contracts have been signed with six investors to supply 20 onshore drilling rigs with 2,000-horsepower capacity, worth $768 million plus 28 trillion rials, according to NIOC planning data. In offshore drilling, five rigs capable of operating in water depths of 350 feet or more are planned, with two close to final contract signing.

Investment pipeline expanded

Other measures include publishing an investment opportunities booklet outlining more than 200 projects worth $137 billion, holding talks on over 100 investment packages with private contractors, approving revised upstream contract guidelines, and securing foreign-currency financing from the central bank for priority economic projects.

Officials say the strategy goes beyond funding individual projects and represents a broader shift in oil sector governance, aimed at transforming the industry from a state-dominated sector into a more open and investment-friendly hub for national production.

 


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