Tejarat News wrote officials last summer “imposed power outages on citizens under the pretext of ending fuel oil use,” though the practice continued behind the scenes.
“Now it’s clear that mazut never left the government’s agenda—not even last year,” it added.
All major power plants ran on mazut in 2024, Saeed Tavakoli, managing director of the National Iranian Gas Company confirmed Tuesday.
“All power plants across the country used fuel oil at full capacity last year,” he told reporters.
“Despite the president’s emphasis on environmental concerns, this was one of his administration’s adopted strategies.”
“Though the president and his deputy stress environmental protection, when there is an energy imbalance in the country, fuel oil is one of the available sources. In last year’s exceptional conditions, all mazut-fired plants were operational,” Tavakoli added.
“People must now endure pollution, blackouts, and disease at the same time,” Tejarat News warned.
Sanctions, age and mismanagement have taxed Iran's energy infrastructure, and the country has long faced blackouts especially in summer months when water and electricity demand surge.
The economic daily criticized the Pezeshkian administration for what it called a retreat from earlier pledges, adding: “Officials speak of environmental protection and renewable energy, but these same officials chose one of the most harmful fuels for humans and nature last winter.”
In November 2024, the government had ordered a halt to fuel oil use in cities including Arak, Isfahan, and Karaj due to worsening air pollution. That ban has since been quietly revoked.
“The state has now paved the way again for fuel oil use,” Tejarat News said. “But even this return failed to stop the blackouts.”
“Fuel oil burning is no longer an emergency fix—it is now a systematic, institutionalized policy that symbolizes the collapse of energy planning and the state’s neglect of public health and the environment,” it added.