Saturday, 26 September 2015

Iran considering Gulf of Oman oil terminal


by ASC Staff on Aug 18, 2014 



 Iran is considering the construction of a big oil terminal in the port city of Jask off the Sea of Oman in the south of the country.
Reports from Tehran claim Pirouz Mousavi, managing director of the Iranian Oil Terminals Company (IOTC), said that the construction of the oil terminal in Jask – which involves storage tanks, loading and unloading wharves, single-point moorings (SPM) as well as onshore and offshore facilities – would need an estimated US$2.5 billion in investment.
He said Iran’s private sector as well as foreign companies may be invited to contribute to this project.


Mousavi added that three SPMs will be constructed in this terminal, adding that state-of-the-art technology will be applied to the storage tanks.
He stated that pipelines are to be laid out to deliver oil from Neka oil terminal near the Caspian Sea and also from oil-rich regions in southern Iran to Jask Port before being exported.
Mousavi said establishment of an oil terminal in Jask will shorten the distance for oil delivery and thereby exports costs.
According to Mousavi, Jask oil terminal will also boost Iran’s storage capacity and provide the country with a bargaining chip in its oil transactions.
In June, Akbar Torkan, a top aide to Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, said Kazakhstan plans to construct a pipeline running through the Iranian territory which will end in Jask, where tankers will be able to dock to load petroleum products.
He added that Iran also seeks to lay a pipeline projected to transfer crude oil from the oil terminal in Neka to Jask.
Also in March, Torkan said part of the natural gas transferred to Jask will be exported to the Persian Gulf kingdom of Oman, while the rest will feed petrochemical and steel industries in the coastal region.

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