- National Iranian Gas Company
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The National Iranian Gas Company (NIGC) was established in 1965 as one of the four principal companies affiliated to the Ministry of Petroleum of the Islamic Republic of Iran with 25,000 million Rials initial capital.
NIGC is responsible for the treatment, transmission, and delivery of natural gas to the domestic, industrial, and commercial sectors and power plants. Close to 6,230 villages and 713 cities and towns have access to natural gas.[1] NIGC does not play a role in awarding upstream gas projects; that task remains in the hands of the National Iranian Oil Company.[2] Iran has the largest gas network in the world with 30,000 kilometres (19,000 mi) of high-pressure pipelines.[3]
Contents
Main subsidiaries
The NIGC subsidiaries are:
- Markazi
- Khorasan
- Qazvin
- Qom
- East Azerbaijan Gas Co.
- Tehran Province gas Co.
- Great Tehran Gas Co.
- Kerman Province Gas Co.
- Fars Gas Co.
- Gas-Khodro
- Gas Transmission
- Gas Storage
- Iran Gas Trade.
Development
See also: Petroleum industry in Iran, Energy in Iran, and Natural gas reserves in IranIn 2011, Iran’s net export of gas in 2010 was 1.57 billion cubic metres. In 2010, Iran’s exports and imports of natural gas were 8.42 and 6.85 billion cubic metres respectively. In 2010, Iran exported 0.4, 0.25, and 7.77 billion cubic metres of gas to Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey respectively. In terms of imports, Iran has received 0.35 and 6.5 billion cubic metres from Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan respectively.
Iran has approximately 29.6 trillion cubic meters of proven gas reserves which accounts for 16% of the world’s total reserves. This places Iran behind Russia with the second largest gas reserves worldwide. In 2009, Iran’s natural gas production stood at 116 billion cubic metres. In 2010, this number rose to 138.5 billion cubic metres which shows a 19% increase. Most of Iran’s gas is consumed domestically and has been increasing at an average annual rate of 12% for the past 15 years.
In 2011, Iran signed a contract worth $10 billion with Baghdad and Damascus in order to export Iran’s gas to Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Mediterranean region and eventually Europe. It is estimated that in the next three to four years there will be an excess production of 200-250 million cubic metres of gas in the South Pars gas field, the largest worldwide gas field located in Persian Gulf.
See also
- Iran Gas Trunkline (IGAT)
- Iran Natural Gas Reserves
- South Pars Gas Field
- North Pars Gas Field
- Golshan Gas Field
- Ferdowsi Gas Field
- Kish Gas Field
- Persian LNG
- Asalouyeh
- Rhum gasfield
- Aghajari Gas Injection Project
- Petroleum industry in Iran
- National Iranian Oil Company
References
- ^ http://www.iran-daily.com/1387/3293/html/economy.htm
- ^ Atieh Bahar: Oil & Gas in Iran (brief Study) Retrieved May 4, 2008
- ^ http://www.iran-daily.com/1388/3396/html/economy.htm
External links
- NIGC Official Website
- US Department of Energy - Iran's entry
- Iran oil and gas - Brief 2002 study
Energy in Iran Oil Gas National Iranian Gas Company · Persian LNG · Gas reserves · South Pars Gas Field · Gas Exporting Countries ForumGasoline National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company · 2007 Gas Rationing Plan in Iran · Fuel smugglingPetrochemicals Pipelines Tabriz–Ankara · Korpezhe–Kurt Kui · Dauletabad–Sarakhs–Khangiran · Iran–Pakistan–India · Neka–Jask · Iran-Armenia · Gas Trunkline · Persian · NabuccoNuclear Wind See also Ministry of Energy · Ministry of Petroleum · Petroleum industry in Iran · Environment · Caspian Sea · Strait of Hormuz · Kharg Island · List of power stations · Reservoirs and dams · Transport · Privatization (MAPNA · AZAR AB · IDRO) · Construction (Khatam al-Anbia · SADRA · ISOICO · DESA - Iran Heavy Diesel Manufacturing Company) · Foreign direct investment · Economy of Iran · Subsidy reform plan · Oil Stabilization Fund · Sanctions against Iran · Energy superpower · Anglo-Persian Oil CompanyCategories:- Oil and gas companies of Iran
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