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5 Indian firms with Iran link on US radar

New Delhi, May 14
The US administration has named India's oil and gas flagship ONGC and Indian Oil Corp (IOC) among the 41 firms worldwide having energy ties with Iran, an act for which it may impose sanctions on them.

The United States Government Accountability Office this week released a report 'Firms Reported to Have Commercial Activity in the Iranian Energy Sector and US Government Contracts' listing companies who have energy ties with Tehran.

“The Iran Sanctions Act (ISA) provides for sanctions against persons, including foreign firms, who invest more than USD 20 million in Iran's energy sector in any 12-month period,” the report said.

Of the 41 firms named in the report, five are Indian. Besides ONGC and IOC, it names ONGC Videsh Ltd -- the overseas investment arm of the state-run explorer -- Oil India Ltd and Petronet LNG Ltd.

OVL, IOC and OIL explored oil and gas in Farsi block and proposed investing USD 5.5 billion in producing gas from the 21.68 trillion cubic feet discovery they made in the offshore block located near the Saudi Arabian border.

Besides, ONGC, OVL, Petronet and Hinduja Group last year signed agreements with Iran to develop one of the 28 phases of the giant South Pars gas field and convert the fuel into LNG for exports at an investment of over USD 10 billion. The report, which said the US has not imposed sanctions on any firm for their Iran energy ties after 1998, also names Hinduja for ties with Iran but lists it as a UK firm.

When contacted, ONGC Chairman and Managing Director and OVL Chairman RS Sharma declined comment but a senior official said the Indian firms' business in Iran were in full compliance with the Government of India policy. "Whatever we are doing is fully compliant with the Government of India policy. We have not violated any rule by investing in Iran. In fact, our investment in Iran has not even violated the US law as OVL-IOC-OIL have not invested more than USD 20 million in any one year in exploring oil and gas in Farsi block," the official said.

The USD 20 million barrier will be broken only when Iran awards them the contract to develop the field or if the Indians made investment in the South Pars fields. "As of now, we only have agreements for Farsi and South Pars Phase-12 development and no investment has gone into the ground," he said.

The US and its allies are aggressively pushing for new sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme. The Obama administration is trying to convince foreign firms that it was becoming too politically risky for them to do business with an increasingly isolated Iran.

The US Government Accountability Office named China's Sinopec, China National Offshore Oil Corp, China National Petroleum Corp, Eni of Italy, Total of France, Repsol of Spain, Gazprom of Russia, Hyundai Heavy Industries of South Korea, Inpex of Japan, Lukoil of Russia, Petrobras of Brazil and StatoilHydro of Norway for ties with Iran.

Since March, a spate of foreign companies have announced plans to cut, suspend or curb ties with Iran, including Reliance Industries, which first stopped exporting fuel to the Islamic nation and has now even ended crude oil purchases. Others who have curbed ties with Iran include oil majors Eni of Italy, Lukoil of Russia and Royal Dutch Shell, US construction and mining equipment maker Caterpillar and luxury German carmarker Daimler. Accounting giants KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ernst & Young have also declared themselves free of business ties to Iran. — PTI

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