Iran Says Discovers New Oilfield with 53 Billion Barrels of Crude

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. (AP)
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. (AP)
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Iran Says Discovers New Oilfield with 53 Billion Barrels of Crude

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. (AP)
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. (AP)

President Hassan Rouhani revealed on Sunday that Iran has discovered a new oilfield in the southwest of the country that has the potential to boost its reserves by about a third.

“Workers and the exploration arm of the National Iranian Oil Company ...have found an oilfield with 53 billion barrels of reserves,” Rouhani said in a televised speech in the central city of Yazd.

The field stretches over 2,400 sq kilometers in the oil-rich Khuzestan province, he added.

Iran had an estimated 157 billion barrels of proved crude oil reserves in January 2018, the EIA website said.

Since withdrawing from Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, the United States has reimposed sanctions to strangle its vital oil trade.



France Sues Iran at Top UN Court over Detained Citizens

France's Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Noel Barrot talks to the press as he arrives for an informal meeting of The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) foreign ministers, in Antalya, on May 15, 2025.
France's Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Noel Barrot talks to the press as he arrives for an informal meeting of The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) foreign ministers, in Antalya, on May 15, 2025.
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France Sues Iran at Top UN Court over Detained Citizens

France's Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Noel Barrot talks to the press as he arrives for an informal meeting of The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) foreign ministers, in Antalya, on May 15, 2025.
France's Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Noel Barrot talks to the press as he arrives for an informal meeting of The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) foreign ministers, in Antalya, on May 15, 2025.

Paris has filed a case against Tehran at the top UN court over two French citizens who have been held in Iran for three years, the French foreign minister said on Friday.

The announcement comes as Iranian negotiators are set to meet with their counterparts from the United Kingdom, France, and Germany in Türkiye on Friday for talks on Iran's nuclear program.

Cecile Kohler, a 40-year-old literature teacher from eastern France and her partner Jacques Paris, in his 70s, were arrested on May 7, 2022, on the last day of a tourist trip to Iran.

They have been held on spying charges, which they have vehemently denied.

In its case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), France accuses Iran "of violating its obligation to provide consular protection" to the pair, who "have been held hostage... detained in appalling conditions that amount to torture," Jean-Noel Barrot told France 2 television.

They are among a number of Europeans still held by Iran in what some European countries, including France, regard as a deliberate strategy of hostage-taking to extract concessions from the West at a time of tension over Iran's nuclear program.

Kohler and Paris are the last known French detainees in Iran after some recent releases and are regarded as "state hostages" by the French government.

The two are jailed in extremely tough conditions, according to their families.