Iran’s energy dominoes on the brink
The country’s widening energy deficit could have a knock-on effect on energy-intensive industries
Iran is facing a significant and growing energy deficit. Low prices for fossil fuels, with the cost of gasoline at ¢2–5/l, have encouraged consumption among Iranian consumers and facilitated systematic fuel smuggling. In 2020, it was estimated that illegal mining operations led to more than 2,000MW of electricity being siphoned from the grid, not accounting for systematic cryptocurrency mining to bypass sanctions. The gas sector faces similar challenges, compounded by high waste from heating systems and significant energy losses from inefficient thermal power plants. As a result, the country is threatened by a domino effect that could lead to the collapse of energy-intensive industries—parti
Also in this section
9 March 2026
Petroleum Economist analysis sees increases in output from Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Kazakhstan among others before region’s murky descent
9 March 2026
Energy sanctions are becoming an increasingly prominent tool of US foreign policy, with the country’s growth in oil and gas production allowing it to impose pressure on rivals without jeopardising its own energy security or that of its allies, argues Matthew McManus, a visiting fellow at the National Center for Energy Analytics
6 March 2026
The March 2026 issue of Petroleum Economist is out now!
6 March 2026
After Europe’s rapid buildout of floating LNG import capacity, Exmar CEO Carl-Antoine Saverys says future growth in floating gas infrastructure will increasingly be driven by developing markets as lower prices, rising energy demand and the need to replace coal unlock new opportunities for unconventional and tailor-made solutions






