<article><p class="lead">China's state-controlled Sinopec is pressing ahead with a $1.06bn upgrade project at Iran's 400,000 b/d Abadan refinery, despite the imminent return of US sanctions on Iran's energy sector.</p><p>Sinopec is contracted to build a new 210,000 b/d crude distillation unit (CDU) to replace three distillation units with a combined 250,000 b/d that were built more than 70 years ago. Its commitment will come as some relief for Tehran ahead of the 4 November re-imposition of US sanctions on its energy sector.</p><p>Companies have been rethinking plans to invest in Iran since the US withdrew from the nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions. Some contracts have been cancelled with state-owned NIOC and its subsidiaries.</p><p>Total, the most high-profile foreign company to finalize a deal with Iran following the lifting of US and EU sanctions in January 2016, has pulled out from <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/1738817">a $4.88bn project</a> to develop phase 11 of the giant offshore South Pars gas field.</p><p>South Korean construction company Daelim Industrial cancelled <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/1691907">a $2.13bn contract</a> to upgrade and expand the 375,000 b/d Isfahan refinery. South Korea's SK Engineering and Construction has halted all work on a $1.88bn contract <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/1745138">to upgrade the 110,000 b/d Tabriz refinery</a>.</p><p>But Sinopec looks to be pressing on at Abadan.</p><p>"The second-phase development of the Abadan refinery began roughly 14 months ago, and thankfully is progressing on schedule," Abadan Refining Company managing director Ali-Akbar Mirghaderi said. "The duration of this project is 48 months, and we expect it to be completed on time." The first-phase upgrade was also carried out by Sinopec.</p><p>Abadan is the largest and oldest of Iran's nine refineries. It sustained heavy damage in 1980 during the Iran-Iraq war. </p><p>The upgrade is being carried out with state-owned engineering company NIOEC. It will result in Abadan's capacity falling to 360,000 b/d but will inprove the quality of all products to at least a Euro-5 standard. Production of higher-value products like gasoline and gasoil will increase in the place of lower-value products like fuel oil.</p><p>Sinopec was awarded the contract by Iran's state-owned refiner NIORDC in mid-2017 as part of a wider $2.7bn agreement between Iran and China struck in early 2017. Financing for the project is coming from China's state-owned export credit insurance agency Sinosure.</p><p>NIORDC has a a $34bn programme to modernise five of Iran's six largest refineries and build an additional 1.41mn b/d of refining capacity. That would raise Iran's crude refining capacity by around 25pc to 2.28mn b/d by March 2022.</p></article>