The New York Times | Stanley Reed: Patrick Pouyann, the chairman and chief executive of the French energy giant Total, worried for months that a breakthrough deal to invest inIranmight not be finalized.
He fretted in particular that the Trump administration would try to scrap the2015 international agreementover Tehransnuclear program. If one party is going out of the treaty, then we will not be able to invest, he said in an interview in February.
On Monday, though, Mr. Pouyann was comfortable enough with the risks to sign an agreement in Tehran committing his company to lead anatural gasproject in the Persian Gulf that could open Irans huge petroleum reserves to international players.
The decision has far-reaching implications, not least setting a path that other Western energy companies could soon follow, and possibly giving Total an inside track for future contracts in Iran. But it also exposes the company to risk if Mr. Trump reneges on the Iran nuclear deal, or if the United States imposes further sanctions against Tehran.
Under the terms of the deal, Total will invest $1 billion in the first phase of development of part of the South Pars gas field. It will form a partnership with the China National Petroleum Corporation and the Iranian company Petropars.
This is the one that everyone has been waiting for, Homayoun Falakshahi, an analyst at the energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie, said of the announcement. This deal very much sets the example.
Mr. Pouyann, a burly former rugby player, seems to have taken a calculated gamble. Iran has vast energy resources the worlds largest proven natural gas reserves and the second-largest trove ofoilin the Persian Gulf, according to theBP Statistical Review of World Energy.
Total is extremely familiar with the slice of South Pars that it will work on, having scoped it out before sanctions made work in Iran impossible for big international companies.
Iranian oil officials are known as tough negotiators, but Mr. Pouyann argues that by being the first of the big international oil companies to sign a major deal with a post-sanctions Iran, he was able to shape much better terms than had been offered in the past.
Being in the lead could also position Total to reap other rewards, possibly including access to the Azadegan oil field, which could become one of the industrys largest projects in the next decade.
Turbulence in the Middle East includingtensions between Qatar and other gulf countries, as well as violence in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere has made some companies wary. But Mr. Pouyann sees a strong opportunity for investment.
What the Middle East can offer us is having giant resources at a low cost, he said. You can have a profitable business.
Iran, long on oil and gas, but short on capital and technology, could be the next great energy frontier if global and domestic politics permit. A wide range of international oil companies are circling around it, looking for the right opportunity.
Totals deal is not without risks, however. In particular, the Trump administration, which is reviewing its approach to Iran, could take a harder line against Tehran, discouraging even international companies from investing there.
While Mr. Pouyann cannot rule out new sanctions, he and other potential investors were pleased whenthe Trump administration reapprovedwaivers, originally signed by the Obama administration, exempting international companies that invest in Iran from certain United States sanctions.
From Totals point of view, the advantages seem to outweigh the drawbacks.
It is a fairly reasonable risk to take, given what they have been seeing and what they have been hearing, said Richard Nephew, a former sanctions coordinator at the State Department who is now a researcher at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University.
Total can count on the backing of the French government, and it has additional protection from the investment of China National Petroleum Corporation, a state-owned company.
And with an annual investment budget of around $17 billion, the $1 billion Total has committed to spend over several years in Iran is relatively small in the grand scheme of things, said Oswald Clint, a senior analyst at Bernstein Research in London.
Pulling off a successful project in Iran will not be easy, and doing business there comes witha broad rangeof difficulties. Total has spent months preparing for this moment, sending small amounts of euros to Iran, for instance, to test the banking system there. The company has identified small European banks that will furnish its local financing needs, but other companies say that financing large deals remains difficult because most lenders avoid Iran, for fear of running afoul of the United States.
Iran can also be a difficult and opaque place to do business, one where corruption is widespread and where political opposition to foreign investment in Irans natural resources can raise obstacles.
Companies also say they need to take extreme care because of sanctions. Some oil executives said that when traveling to Iran to meet with officials there, for instance, they take only laptops stripped of sophisticated software like encryption programs, and older models of mobile phones, to avoid accidentally violating export controls.