
Iran has issued its first drilling order in the Caspian Sea in nearly 30 years, aiming to revive long-stalled exploration in the region, Oil Minister Mohsen Paknejad said on Friday.
Paknejad said the new operations could unlock substantial reserves. “There is potential to extract over 600 million barrels of crude oil in place from this area,” he told reporters on the sidelines of the 29th International Oil Exhibition in Tehran.
Exploratory drilling in Iran’s sector of the Caspian Sea had been largely inactive since the mid-1990s, due to technical, financial, and logistical challenges.
The minister did not specify when drilling would begin or which block would be targeted first.
The decision marks a renewed effort to join other Caspian littoral states — including Russia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan — that have developed significant offshore production in recent decades.
Iran remains the only Caspian country not currently extracting oil or gas from the sea. According to industry data, the region’s other coastal states collectively produced over 1.2 million barrels per day of oil and 50 billion cubic meters of gas in 2023, backed by more than $160 billion in cumulative investments.
International companies such as BP, TotalEnergies, Lukoil, Eni, and Dragon Oil have led offshore development in neighboring states. Meanwhile, Iran’s own efforts have faced repeated setbacks, including equipment failures, limited foreign investment, and deepwater technical constraints.
Despite previous announcements, including seismic surveys and attempted drillings using the Amir Kabir rig, Iran’s Caspian offshore activity has yielded no commercial output to date.

An Iranian graduate student detained for six weeks as part of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown has decided to voluntarily leave the United States, even after the government dropped the initial charge that led to his arrest, the Associated Press reported on Friday.
Alireza Doroudi, a mechanical engineering student at the University of Alabama, was detained in March and held at a facility in Louisiana after his visa was revoked. A US government attorney later said the revocation was “prudential,” meaning it would not take effect until he left the country.
Doroudi’s lawyer, David Rozas, told AP there was no evidence to support the government’s earlier claim that Doroudi posed a national security risk. He called the case a “travesty of justice.”
Doroudi’s fiancée, Sama Ebrahimi Bajgani, said the prolonged detention left him feeling pressured to abandon his legal challenge. “They just want to make him tired so he can deport himself,” she told AP.
In a letter written from detention, Doroudi called the case “pure injustice” and said he had followed all legal procedures. The immigration judge in the case denied his request for bond and set a deadline at the end of May for further motions. Rozas said Doroudi chose to stop fighting and self-deport.
Doroudi had specialized in metallurgical engineering, and his detention sparked concern on campus. The University of Alabama College Democrats described the arrest as a “cold, vicious dagger through the heart of UA’s international community.”
Doroudi’s case comes amid renewed scrutiny of the Trump administration’s policies on international students, including potential new visa restrictions for citizens of countries like Iran. In recent weeks, several other foreign students and recent graduates — including individuals from Turkey and Palestine — have been detained under national security-related reasons, prompting concern from rights groups and legal advocates.
Iranian Foreign Minister is scheduled to visit Saudi Arabia and Qatar on Saturday as part of efforts to strengthen ties with regional neighbors, Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei said on Friday.
Baghaei told reporters that the minister will travel to Riyadh for talks with senior Saudi officials and later head to Doha to attend the Arab-Iranian Dialogue Conference.
Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Friday that current diplomatic engagement is only possible because US President Donald Trump has retreated from earlier demands.
“Negotiations are taking place today only because the bully has backed down,” Ghalibaf said, according to state media.
“We can give up everything, but never our dignity,” he said, emphasizing that talks must be conducted with awareness.
Ghalibaf said Iran is not opposed to diplomacy, but stressed that negotiations must follow clear principles and not rely on trust in those who “change their words every day.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi will visit Saudi Arabia and Qatar on Saturday, one day before the fourth round of indirect nuclear talks between Tehran and Washington in Muscat, Qatari news website The New Arab reported on Friday.
According to unnamed Iranian sources cited by the outlet, Araghchi will brief Saudi officials on the status of the negotiations with the United States. The visit also includes discussions on regional developments, particularly the ongoing war in Gaza and efforts to end the humanitarian crisis there.
Araghchi is expected to travel to Doha after his meetings in Riyadh to attend the Arab-Iranian Dialogue Conference.






