Iranian leaderâs fourth oil minister nominee given nod
EFL Subscription required - FT | Iranâs parliament on Sunday gave a clear vote of confidence to Kazem Vaziri-Hamaneh as oil minister, endorsing the fourth nominee from President Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad. Mr Vaziri-Hamaneh said he would give priority to âdomestic capabilityâ, casting further doubt on Iranâs ability to attract the foreign investment analysts say is needed to continue daily production of about 4m barrels.
The nomination marked a political retreat for Mr Ahmadi-Nejad, as Mr Vaziri-Hamaneh, caretaker minister for four months, is a ministry insider uneasy with the presidentâs populist slogan of fighting an âoil mafiaâ. Of 259 parliamentarians, 172 voted for Mr Vaziri-Hamaneh, with 53 against and 34 abstaining. Proponents argued that his 32 yearsâ experience in the ministry, mostly in senior management, combined with piety, which is important to Mr Ahmadi-Nejad, made him more suitable than previous nominees.
In a speech to parliament, Mr Vaziri-Hamaneh supported using the Oil Stabilisation Fund, which absorbs windfall oil revenues, to develop oil and gas fields âspeedilyâ and so raise production. âIf we take over financial management [from oil majors] and use the OSF as the best way of investment, the countryâs industries will be revived and equipment can be built domestically,â he said.
Speaking as Tehran remained enveloped in its heaviest traffic smog for years, he called for a reduction in energy consumption, which he said was 5.3 times the world per capita average. That's why they need the nukes, no doubt. | As acting oil minister, Mr Vaziri-Hamaneh criticised the âbuy-backâ system that has governed foreign companiesâ involvement in Iranâs oil and gas industry for eight years and disliked by oil majors, although he has not proposed an alternative. âWe are reviewing buy-back and must think about a system that can be trusted both by people and government,â he told the Financial Times.
Mr Vaziri-Hamaneh added it was ânot only the oil ministry which decides about projectsâ. But many deputies are convinced Mr Ahmadi-Nejad, who took a conciliatory tone yesterday when he promised to abide by parliamentâs decision, has no choice but to compromise. âItâs post-election and he should moderate his slogans,â said one conservative.
Posted by: lotp 2005-12-12 |