The Future of Iran's Oil and Its Economic Implications

2016
Author(s)
Pooya Azadi
The Future of Iran's Oil and Its Economic Implications

Co-authored with Hassan Dehghanpour, Mehran Sohrabi, and Kaveh Madani.

The unprecedented global support for policies to reduce carbon emissions along with the emergence of new technologies for extraction of oil from unconventional resources have made it increasingly unlikely that Iran’s oil reserves will ever be exhausted. As such, determining the real amounts of Iran’s oil endowments and reserves – which have long been a subject of controversy – is of little practical value now. Rather, focus should be devoted to assess the rate at which Iran can recover oil given its mature fields and underinvested infrastructure.
 
This study presents a field-by-field analysis of Iran’s crude oil production history and its future projections to 2040. A total of 98 oil fields and reservoirs with a cumulative production of 72 billion barrels since 1913 are considered. Future projections are made based upon the current status of active fields and their existing infrastructure, ongoing and announced projects, and potential production augmentations from undeveloped and undiscovered fields.
 
Pooya Azadi is leading the efforts of the Stanford Iran 2040 Project.