Iran<\/a>\u2019s petrochemical industry was privatized more than a decade ago. Today, the government is only paving the ground for the development of petrochemical sector. During years of international sanctions on Iran, the government was of great help to the private sector in its transactions. From 2008 to 2015, Iran\u2019s petrochemical <\/a>industry had not used finance and usance. But thanks to efforts by the administration of President Hassan Rouhani and the conclusion of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) we have been witnessing achievements in the petrochemical industry. Finalization of an agreement between Kian Petrochemical Plant and Germany\u2019s Linde is a case in point. <\/a><\/p>\n Petchem Plants Startup<\/strong><\/p>\n Over the past several years, Iran has been stepping up construction of petrochemical plants. According to official data, the number of operating petrochemical plants has increased from 46 in 2013 to 53 today with an output of 54 million tons a year. Three more petrochemical plants are projected to become operational in one month. Therefore, the rated capacity of these petrochemical plants will cross 64 million tons.<\/p>\n Furthermore, more than 50 other petrochemical plants with a nominal capacity of 41.3 million tons are under construction. Experts see the startup of these 50 projects as the second jump in Iran\u2019s petrochemical industry to bring the country to its real standing in this sector. Some of them are as follows: hydrogenation unit of Shazand Petrochemical Plant, Petrochemical Research and Technology Company\u2019s the semi-industrial HDPE unit, Fajr-2 centralized utility, Ilam HDPE unit, PBR\/SBR unit of Takht Jamshid Petrochemical Plant, West Ethylene Pipeline\u2019s 8th to 10th tranches, Lorestan HDPE\/LDPE unit, Urmia Petrochemical Plant\u2019s sulfuric acid unit, Mahabad Petrochemical Plant\u2019s HDPE\/LDPE unit, Shohada ammoniac\/urea unit in Marvdasht, Assaluyeh ethylene glycol (Morvarid Petrochemical Plant) and the second phase of 11th olefin project (Kavian Petrochemical Plant). <\/a><\/p>\n Petchem Sales Up in Iran<\/strong><\/p>\n Conditions have improved for Iran\u2019s petrochemical exports following the implementation of JCPOA last January. Iran\u2019s petrochemical exports have grown 25% post-sanctions.<\/p>\n Over the past three years, Iran\u2019s petrochemical sales has increased from 27.3 million tons to 39 million tons a year, earning the country $19.7 billion in revenue. Over these years, Iran\u2019s petrochemical industry has always insisted on the completion of the value chain and downstream industries through proposing new development projects of high value-added and acceptable economic justification based on spatial planning studies with a view to exporting products, completing value chain for presentation to qualified investors, helping value engineering in petrochemical projects for reducing costs and providing infrastructure and utility for meeting the needs of the private sector.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Target-Oriented Petchem Projects<\/strong><\/p>\n A gap created in the research and technology of Iran\u2019s petrochemical industry due to widespread privatization in this industry over the past two years has been healed. Private companies, in cooperation with Petrochemical Research and Technology Company (PRTC), are constantly looking for making research projects practical and boosting cooperation with this state-run company. At present, the research and development network in Iran\u2019s petrochemical industry is one of the largest networks in Iran.<\/p>\n Leading research centers towards practical studies and resolving problems of petrochemical industries have been among the effective measures taken by the current administration.
\nThe signature of a historic nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers in July 2015 led to the lifting of restrictions on investment and transfer of technology.<\/p>\n
\nThe most important and the most practical measure by the Iranian government in favor of the private sector has been its efforts to win guarantee for foreign investment in the petrochemical sector. In the past, foreign companies invested in Iran because the government guaranteed exports of petrochemical products, but today there is no such a guarantee. Therefore, the government is seriously looking for a solution to resolve this problem. Germany<\/a>\u2019s BASF and Linde, France<\/a>\u2019s Axens, South Korea<\/a>\u2019s Hyundai, Royal Dutch Shell <\/a>and South Africa\u2019s Sasol are among top companies engaged in negotiations with Iran. All of them have been speaking about the issue of guaranteeing investment in Iran\u2019s petrochemical industry. They know quite well that the rate of return on deposits in the banks is about one percent, while the rate of return on investment in Iran\u2019s petrochemical projects is at least 20 percent.<\/p>\n
\nOver the past two years, 11 petrochemical projects have come on-stream in Iran. Some of these projects are unique as they have become operational while Iran was international restrictions.<\/p>\n
\nThe startup of petrochemical projects will continue in Iran. According to plans, 11 projects with a capacity of 6.2 million tons are to become operational this calendar year to March 2017. Furthermore, 6 other projects are forecast to come online next calendar year.<\/p>\n
\nThe value of Iran\u2019s petrochemical exports is nearing its previous levels. In 2012, Iran gained $12 billion from petrochemical exports. Today, its revenue stands at $10 billion although oil prices have been almost halved.<\/p>\n
\nHelping acquire technical know-how for producing chemicals and catalysts needed in the petrochemical industry in collaboration with Iranian elite and the National Foundation of Elites and domestic capabilities like universities and PRTC, indigenizing technical savvy and engineering services including issuance of license, basic design of petrochemical products, helping commercialization of indigenized technical savvies, supporting domestic manufacturing of equipment needed in projects, cooperation with legal bodies for improving business environment, helping remove red tape and streamline bureaucracy, examining bottlenecks in manufacturing companies and finding solutions to them have all been on the agenda of the government.<\/p>\n