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Decoding Iran’s energy sector: Surviving without thriving under sanctions regime


What Happened

  • With the US-Israel military campaign targeting Iran directly in 2026, global attention turned to Iran's oil sector — long crippled by sanctions but never fully defeated.
  • Iran is OPEC's third-largest producer, pumping approximately 3.3 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude plus 1.3 million bpd of condensate and other liquids.
  • China absorbs roughly 90% of Iran's oil exports of approximately 1.7 million bpd, making it Iran's economic lifeline and sanctions-buster of last resort.
  • Iran has adapted to Western sanctions through a sophisticated shadow fleet, ship-to-ship transfers, third-country re-labelling, and non-dollar payment systems.
  • The US Treasury imposed its fourth round of sanctions on Iran's oil and petrochemical trade in 2025, targeting over 50 entities across UAE, China, and Hong Kong — specifically hitting Chinese refineries buying Iranian crude.
  • The 2026 conflict threatens Iran's oil infrastructure directly — refineries, pipelines, and export terminals — potentially disrupting not just Iran's income but global supply.
  • Iran's primary oil and gas fields are concentrated in the Khuzestan province (southwest) and the South Pars/North Dome gas field — the world's largest natural gas reservoir, shared with Qatar.

Static Topic Bridges

Iran's Oil Sector: Infrastructure and Strategic Assets

Iran holds the world's fourth-largest proven crude oil reserves (~157 billion barrels) and the world's second-largest proven natural gas reserves (~34 trillion cubic metres). Its major oil infrastructure includes the Abadan and Bandar Abbas refineries, the Kharg Island export terminal (handling ~90% of Iran's oil exports), and the South Pars gas field.

  • South Pars/North Dome field: Iran's share is South Pars; Qatar's is North Dome — together the world's largest gas field with ~51 trillion cubic metres of gas.
  • Kharg Island terminal in the Persian Gulf is Iran's critical vulnerability — it handles the vast majority of oil exports and would be a high-value military target.
  • Iran's oil production capacity declined sharply after 2012 sanctions (from ~3.5 million bpd to ~2.5 million bpd) and partially recovered post-2015 JCPOA; then collapsed again after Trump's 2018 "maximum pressure" reimposition.
  • Under JCPOA (2015), Iran's production recovered to ~3.8 million bpd within 18 months of sanctions relief.
  • Iran is a founding member of OPEC (1960) and consistently uses oil as a geopolitical tool.

Connection to this news: Iran's oil infrastructure, built to survive sanctions, now faces the prospect of direct military strikes — a scenario that could remove 1.7 million bpd from global markets instantly, with cascading price effects.

Western Sanctions Architecture Against Iran

The US-led sanctions regime against Iran is the most comprehensive ever imposed on a major oil producer. It began in 1979 (after the Islamic Revolution and hostage crisis) and escalated dramatically through multiple phases: ILSA (1996), UN Security Council Resolutions (2006–2010), JCPOA (2015 relief), US withdrawal (2018), and "maximum pressure" (2018–2021).

  • JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, 2015): Iran agreed to limit uranium enrichment and accept IAEA inspections in exchange for sanctions relief. Signed by P5+1 (US, UK, France, Russia, China + Germany) and Iran. The US withdrew in 2018 under Trump; Iran gradually rolled back its JCPOA commitments.
  • "Maximum pressure" policy (2018–): Re-imposed oil sanctions; drove Iran's exports from ~2.5 million bpd to below 500,000 bpd at their lowest.
  • Iran recovered exports to ~1.7 million bpd primarily by routing through China's "teapot refineries" (small, independent Chinese refineries) willing to buy discounted Iranian crude.
  • Shadow fleet tactics: false AIS (vessel tracking) signals, flag-hopping (changing registration), ship-to-ship transfers at sea, and re-labelling cargo as Malaysian or Iraqi crude.
  • The mBridge multi-CBDC platform (China, HK, Thailand, UAE, Saudi Arabia) — with over $55 billion in transactions by early 2026 — enables Iran-China oil settlement outside SWIFT.

Connection to this news: Iran's proven ability to survive 40+ years of sanctions by routing trade through China means that even the current military escalation may not eliminate its oil revenues entirely — but it does put its physical infrastructure at risk.

India-Iran Energy Relations and the Chabahar Factor

India has historically been a significant buyer of Iranian crude — until US secondary sanctions forced New Delhi to cut imports to near-zero in 2019–20. India's relationship with Iran's energy sector is entangled with broader strategic interests: the Chabahar Port project, the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), and India's desire to access Central Asian markets.

  • India imported ~12–15% of its crude from Iran before 2018 sanctions; this fell to near-zero under US pressure.
  • India obtained a partial sanctions waiver from the US in 2018 to develop the Shahid Beheshti terminal at Chabahar Port — one of the few US exemptions to Iran sanctions.
  • Chabahar is strategically vital: it gives India direct access to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan; it also connects to the INSTC (Mumbai–Moscow corridor via Iran).
  • In May 2024, India signed a 10-year lease agreement for operating the Chabahar Port terminal — a rare positive development in India-Iran ties.
  • The 2026 conflict puts Chabahar investments and India's energy/trade diversification strategy at direct risk.

Connection to this news: Iran's energy sector is not merely a geopolitical story for UPSC — it directly affects India's energy security, diaspora safety, Chabahar connectivity, and INSTC ambitions.

Key Facts & Data

  • Iran: world's 4th-largest proven crude reserves (~157 billion barrels); 2nd-largest gas reserves (~34 trillion cu m).
  • Iran's oil production: ~3.3 million bpd crude + 1.3 million bpd condensate and liquids.
  • Iran's oil exports: ~1.7 million bpd; China absorbs ~90%.
  • South Pars (Iran) / North Dome (Qatar): world's largest natural gas field.
  • Kharg Island: handles ~90% of Iran's crude oil exports — primary export terminal.
  • JCPOA (2015): P5+1 + Iran; US withdrew 2018; Iran rolled back commitments in response.
  • India-Iran crude imports: ~12–15% of India's needs pre-2018; near-zero post-US pressure.
  • Chabahar Port: India signed 10-year operations lease (May 2024); India's strategic gateway to Central Asia.
  • mBridge platform: $55+ billion in transactions by early 2026; enables non-dollar Iran-China oil settlement.
  • OPEC founding: 1960; Iran is a founding member.