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UAE gas plant hit in Iranian attacks may not fully recover until 2027 - FT

May 12, 2026, 12:42 GMT+1

Damage to the United Arab Emirates' largest gas processing plant from Iranian attacks last month may not be fully repaired until 2027, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday, citing operator Adnoc Gas.

Adnoc Gas aims to restore the Habshan facility to 80% of processing capacity by the end of 2026, with full operations expected in 2027, the report said, citing a company statement.

The plant, which was hit twice in early April, suspended operations after debris from intercepted drones sparked fires, according to the FT.

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Qatar tells ships near LNG hub to go dark - Bloomberg

May 12, 2026, 12:12 GMT+1

Qatar asked ships near its main liquefied natural gas export facility to turn off their transponders this week, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

The directive applied to vessels within Ras Laffan port, anchorages and port waters, telling them to switch off their Automatic Identification System. The move appeared to trigger a wave of tankers going dark across the Persian Gulf, according to the report.

One of the people familiar with the matter described the directive as a safety measure.

Iran businesses scale back as inflation, internet curbs bite

May 12, 2026, 12:01 GMT+1

Businesses across Iran are cutting jobs, scaling back operations and facing possible closure as internet disruptions, inflation and the economic fallout from war deepen pressure on employers and consumers, according to messages sent to Iran International.

A nail and manicure instructor said her business had effectively stopped operating since March last year as customers struggling to cover basic expenses reduced spending on beauty services.

The woman said internet outages had also cut off income from selling online training packages. At the same time, the signal for her point-of-sale payment terminal had been disabled.

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Iran businesses scale back as inflation, internet curbs bite

May 12, 2026, 11:41 GMT+1

Businesses across Iran are cutting jobs, scaling back operations and facing possible closure as internet disruptions, inflation and the economic fallout from war deepen pressure on employers and consumers, according to messages sent to Iran International.

A nail and manicure instructor said her business had effectively stopped operating since March last year as customers struggling to cover basic expenses reduced spending on beauty services.

The woman said internet outages had also cut off income from selling online training packages. At the same time, the signal for her point-of-sale payment terminal had been disabled.

An AI-generated image shows an Iranian nail and manicure instructor works on a client at her salon.
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An AI-generated image shows an Iranian nail and manicure instructor works on a client at her salon.

“When I followed up, they told me the signal for payment devices used by ‘non-essential businesses’ had been suspended indefinitely for security reasons,” she told Iran International.

Industrial firms report layoffs, bankruptcies

Messages received by Iran International also pointed to growing unemployment and bankruptcies in industries linked to petrochemicals, ports and construction.

Many workers who lost jobs or faced layoffs said they had turned to ride-hailing services such as Snapp or other unstable work to survive.

One worker in the industrial sector said the price of steel profiles used in construction had more than doubled since before the war, rising from 700,000 rials ($0.38) per kilogram to 1.55 million rials ($0.85).

  • Iran’s labor market cracking under layoffs and inflation

    Iran’s labor market cracking under layoffs and inflation

“Because of these price increases, we’ve been unemployed for three months and can no longer afford raw materials,” he said.

Steel profile prices have risen between 120% and 160% over the past year, according to accounts sent to Iran International.

A cabinet-maker said the price of a single MDF sheet had climbed from 30 million rials ($16.50) last year to between 150 million rials ($82.50) and 170 million rials ($93) this year.

“With raw material costs rising 400% to 470%, continuing the business and paying rent is no longer possible,” he said.

Other citizens previously told Iran International that shortages of iron sheets and petrochemical materials in cities including Isfahan had forced many industrial workshops to close.

  • Internet shutdown drives Iranians to leave country for access

    Internet shutdown drives Iranians to leave country for access

Port workers say wages delayed

Iran International also received reports of layoffs and business slowdowns in ports and logistics hubs.

An employee at Rajaei Port said many workers had been dismissed and those still employed often received salaries late.

“The port has become very quiet,” the worker said.

Rajaei, one of Iran’s main commercial ports, was hit by a major fire in May 2025 after what authorities described as an explosion involving a container carrying hazardous chemicals including sodium perchlorate. The blast killed dozens of people.

Several contractors linked to the port had already faced financial difficulties before the explosion and the subsequent war, according to workers familiar with the situation.

Another resident from Bandar-e Emam wrote that companies linked to the port had reduced staff and struggled to pay wages on time.

Iranian outlet Rouydad24 reported on May 7 that workers at Mobarakeh Steel had seen wages reduced to the official minimum despite earlier assurances that salaries would be paid without disruption following US and Israeli attacks.

The report said many skilled workers had turned to app-based taxi driving for income.

Restaurants squeezed by rising prices

Restaurants and food businesses have also come under pressure from higher prices and weakening consumer demand.

The owner of a fast-food restaurant in Lahijan, north of Iran, said the cost of ingredients changed so rapidly that menu prices had to increase almost daily.

An AI-generated photo shows a fast-food restaurant worker preparing sandwiches at his shop.
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An AI-generated photo shows a fast-food restaurant worker preparing sandwiches at his shop.

“The ingredients for a sandwich sold today for one million rials ($0.55) may cost 1.1 million rials ($0.60) to replace a few days later,” the restaurant owner wrote to Iran International. “Customers are unhappy and we are also being hurt by the situation.”

The decline of the rial had pushed the monthly minimum wage including benefits down to roughly $88 in real terms.

  • Tehran media break silence on war’s toll on livelihoods

    Tehran media break silence on war’s toll on livelihoods

A restaurant owner in Kish said he had already laid off more than 10 employees and now saw closure as the only remaining option.

Customers and business owners also reported sharp increases in fast-food prices, with some sandwiches selling for around five million rials ($2.75) and pizzas reaching 1.2 million rials ($6.60).

Iran's carpet exports collapse from $2.5 billion to near zero, official says

May 12, 2026, 11:31 GMT+1

Iran's handwoven carpet exports, once worth nearly $2.5 billion annually, have now "virtually stopped," a provincial industry official said, reflecting the steep decline of one of the country's best-known exports.

"At the moment, carpet exports have nearly reached zero," Abdolrahman Tasmim Ghatee, head of the union of handicrafts sellers and handwoven carpet producers in Fars province, told the Iranian Labor News Agency (ILNA), a semi-official labor-focused news outlet.

He said exports, which once stood at close to $2.5 billion, had fallen to less than $50 million in recent years, with little trade now taking place.

Market slump hits producers

Tasmim Ghatee said around 90% of the sector depended on tourism, especially foreign visitors, but international tourism had largely dried up.

"Some shops do not make a single sale during the week because there are simply no buyers," he said. "After paying for food and daily expenses, people have nothing left to spend on decorative goods, handicrafts and carpets."

He said the market downturn had worsened after the war that began in late February between Iran, Israel and the United States, which disrupted trade and deepened economic uncertainty, even as a fragile ceasefire remains in place.

Fighting has largely stopped, but tensions persist amid stalled negotiations between Washington, Tehran and Israel over sanctions, regional security and Iran's nuclear program.

  • Iran's Handwoven Carpet Exports Lowest In 24 Years

    Iran's Handwoven Carpet Exports Lowest In 24 Years

  • Iran’s carpet exports unravel with 90% plunge

    Iran’s carpet exports unravel with 90% plunge

Decades-long decline

Iranian handwoven carpet exports generated more than $2 billion in revenue in 1994, one of the industry's strongest years, before entering a long decline driven by sanctions, rising competition and weaker global demand.

Exports fell to $69 million in 2019 and just $2 million in the second quarter of 2020, according to customs data and industry reports. By March 2024, exports had dropped to $39.7 million from $426 million in 2017, according to officials cited by ILNA.

Industry figures have blamed US sanctions, trade restrictions, currency rules and stronger competition from India, Turkey, Afghanistan, China and Pakistan for the downturn. The United States, once a major market for Iranian carpets, reimposed restrictions on Iranian rug imports after Washington withdrew from the 2015 nuclear deal in 2018.

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Weavers leave the trade

The number of carpet weavers in Fars province has dropped by about 80% from around 6,000 in 2018 to roughly 1,000 now, Tasmim Ghatee said.

"When carpets and handicrafts are not sold, naturally the weaver will not continue working," he said.

He described how rural women could spend six months weaving a carpet while covering raw material costs and household duties, only to find no market for the finished product.

"How can she start again?" he said.

Officials push digital sales

Gholamhossein Zanhari, head of the carpet department at Fars province's industry and trade office, said the sector needed safer export routes and stronger online sales to survive.

He pointed to regional markets including Armenia, Georgia, Oman and Turkey, as well as Japan, South Korea and Singapore, as potential destinations and said platforms such as Etsy and eBay could help producers reach consumers directly.

"Digitalization is not just a sales tool, but a way to maintain business continuity" during crises, he said.

Kuwait says detained infiltrators admitted links to Revolutionary Guards

May 12, 2026, 11:08 GMT+1

Kuwait's interior ministry said on Tuesday that a group of men detained after allegedly trying to enter the country by sea admitted during questioning that they belonged to Iran's Revolutionary Guards.

The ministry said the men told investigators they had been tasked with infiltrating Bubiyan Island aboard a rented fishing boat to carry out hostile acts against Kuwait, according to state news agency KUNA.

Kuwait's defense ministry said earlier that authorities had arrested four infiltrators who tried to enter the country by sea.

The interior ministry said the group exchanged fire with Kuwaiti armed forces, wounding one service member, while two other suspected infiltrators fled.

Bubiyan Island lies in northeastern Kuwait near the Iraqi border.