Iran–China 25-year Cooperation Program
The Iran–China 25-year Cooperation Program or Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between I.R. Iran, P.R. China is a 25-year cooperation agreement on the further development of Iran–China relations signed in Tehran by the Chinese and Iranian foreign ministers on 27 March 2021; the final details of the agreement have yet to be officially announced. Under a draft of the 25-year agreement previously obtained by The New York Times, China is to invest in Iran's economy over that time period in exchange for a steady and heavily discounted supply of oil from Iran. The key details of the deal were originally reported by British journalist and author, Simon Watkins, in an article published on 3 September 2019 in Petroleum Economist stating that the agreement includes up to towards developing Iran's oil, [Natural Natural gas reserves in Iran|gas reserves in Iran|gas] and petrochemicals sectors and another investment of towards upgrading Iran's transportation and manufacturing infrastructure. According to Iranian authorities, reviving the Chinese One Belt One Road Initiative is also part of the agreement.
The report by Petroleum Economist stated that, according to the agreement, "China will be able to buy any and all Iranian oil, gas and petrochemical products at a minimum guaranteed discount of 12pc to the six-month rolling mean price of comparable benchmark products, plus another 6pc to 8pc of that metric for risk-adjusted compensation." The same report added that the agreement would allow China to deploy security personnel on the ground in Iran to protect Chinese projects, and that there would be additional personnel and materiel available to protect the eventual transit of oil, gas, and petrochemicals supplies from Iran to China, where necessary, including through the Persian Gulf.
Later reports in other publications added that the deal included the leasing of Iranian islands to China were categorically denied by Iranian authorities, including by the Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who stated "such a deal doesn't even exist, let alone have articles", and that "we have not handed over a meter of land to China or any other country, nor granted any foreign country the exclusive right to take advantage of a handspan of Iran’s soil, and will not do this ”. Later on, the spokesman for the Iranian foreign ministry confirmed to reporters that "there is no handing over of the Iranian islands, no presence of military forces and no other illusions". Reports regarding heavily discounted Iranian oil and petrochemical sales were also denied.
Based on the agreement, China has agreed to inject $300-$400 billion by foreign direct investment into the Iranian oil, gas and petrochemical industries.
The original plan for cooperation had been proposed by General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping during a 2016 visit to Iran. Iranian president Hassan Rouhani signed the final draft of the program on June 23 in a cabinet meeting and ordered the Iranian foreign ministry to finalize the negotiations., Iran's parliament has yet to pass the deal but will likely follow suit. On 1 October 2020 President Rouhani sent a message to Xi Jinping about signing off on the program.
Background
The Republic of China and Iran officially established diplomatic relations in 1937. In 1971, Iran recognized the People's Republic of China as the sole legitimate government of China, and likewise rescinded its recognition of the Republic of China as a state. In the early years of the Cold War, Iran and the People's Republic of China were on opposing sides of the Iron Curtain, with Iran being a part of the American-led Western Bloc from the 1953 coup and China being a part of the Soviet-led Eastern Bloc until the latter broke away in 1961, thus siding with the Western Bloc until the end of the Cold War.Following the 1979 Iranian Revolution, which established the present-day Islamic Republic of Iran, the two states maintained their diplomatic relationship as Iran and the United States severed their bilateral ties during the Iran–U.S. hostage crisis. Iran was eventually put under international sanctions, although China still provided aid in the form of armaments to the Iranians during the Iran–Iraq War.
The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, on which Iran is an observer state, and the 25-year Iran–China program are both part of the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative, so it is likely that Iran's request for permanent membership will be repeated in the near future and will be accepted by all its members.