South Pars is the world's largest gas field and CNPC's
investment freeze is a blow to Tehran's efforts to maintain
financing for energy projects amid the re-imposition U.S.
sanctions on its energy sector earlier this year.
Iran said on Nov. 25 that CNPC replaced Total <TOTF.PA> as the
operator of Phase 11 project at South Pars after the French
company ended its participation rather than violate the
sanctions.
The investment halt followed four rounds of talks in Beijing,
including one as recently as October, with senior U.S. officials
who urged CNPC to refrain from injecting fresh financing in
Iran, said one of the sources, an executive with direct
knowledge of the matter.
It was not clear if the Chinese government gave direct orders
for the halt, but the sources said it is politically sensible
amid the trade negotiations between China and the United States.
"China sees the relationship with the U.S. as paramount over
anything else. As a state-owned entity CNPC will stay clear of
bringing any unwanted trouble into this relationship as the U.S.
China trade talks are under way," said a second source, an
official familiar with CNPC's global strategy.
The sources requested anonymity as they are not authorized to
speak to the media.
Total was the first global energy firm to return to Iran after
earlier sanctions were lifted after the U.S., Russia, China,
France, Germany, Britain, the European Union and Iran agreed to
a pact limiting the Islamic Republic's nuclear program in late
2015.
The U.S. quit the pact in May and re-imposed sanctions because
it did not curb Iran's ballistic missile program and to pressure
the country to stop supporting proxies in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq
and Yemen.
The first source said that Iran has 120 days to review CNPC's
role in South Pars and decide whether to keep the Chinese firm
as a dormant investor or cancel the deal.
CNPC did not respond to three requests for comment. Two Iranian
oil ministry officials contacted by Reuters declined to comment.
While agreeing to halt its South Pars participation, CNPC did
convince the U.S. that it needed to continue investing in the
North Azadegan and Masjid-i-Suleiman (MIS) oilfields to recoup
the billions of dollars spent under buy-back contracts signed
years ago, said the first source and a third separate official
with knowledge of CNPC's oil activities.
Without CNPC providing sub-contracting engineering work and
supplying production equipments, the Iranian side will have
difficulty maintaining the oil output, the sources said.
North Azadegan, in southwestern Khuzestan province, is estimated
to be pumping close to 80,000 barrels per day of crude oil after
production started in 2016, according to CNPC's website.
(Reporting by Chen Aizhu in Singapore; Additional reporting by
Parisa Hafezi in Ankara; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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