Hormuz Market Comparison

Isfahan steel vs Khuzestan Steel

A comparison of Isfahan and Khuzestan iron and steel clusters for industrial operators assessing joint ventures, local production, repair needs, utilities, logistics and operating readiness.

Researched July 12, 2026 Confidence: Medium 24 sources Infrastructure and operating readiness
Investor profileIndustrial operator or manufacturer
ObjectiveInfrastructure and operating readiness
Entry modeJoint venture or local production

Executive verdict

Neither case currently supports an ordinary greenfield or immediate full-throughput manufacturing decision. Both clusters retain unusually large installed assets, but the March 2026 strikes turned operating recovery into the first diligence gate. Isfahan has the larger and more diversified pre-disruption steel base, including flat products, and has one verified sign of recovery: Mobarakeh restarted Furnace No. 8 on June 9. Khuzestan offers the stronger theoretical port-and-heavy-plate configuration, connecting DRI and semi-finished steel with Oxin plate capability and provincial maritime infrastructure. However, its reported damage included DRI Unit 2, Zamzam 3 and steelmaking, with no credible public evidence of restoration found. Choose Isfahan only for staged recovery and localisation work after site verification; choose Khuzestan only if a buyer requires plate, pipe or port-corridor integration and accepts a longer, evidence-dependent restart path.[1, 2, 5, 6]

Decision snapshot

How the two cases differ

Case A

Integrated Steelmaking and Flat-Steel Processing in Isfahan Province

Isfahan remains Iran’s largest documented steel concentration, led by Mobarakeh’s 7.2 Mt/yr crude-steel capacity, Esfahan Steel’s 3.6 Mt/yr, and Saba’s 1.6 Mt/yr. The cluster combines direct reduction, steelmaking and substantial flat-product capability, creating a…[1, 2, 3, 4]

Key strengths

  • Mobarakeh, Esfahan Steel and Saba together represented 12.4 Mt/yr of recorded raw-steel capacity in Isfahan Province in 2023, with Mobarakeh and Esfahan Steel ranking first and third nationally in the USGS table.[1]

  • The cluster covers multiple stages of production: Mobarakeh had 9.5 Mt/yr of recorded DRI capacity, while Esfahan Steel had coke, DRI and raw-steel assets in the province.[1]

Key constraints

  • Mobarakeh stated on April 2, 2026 that severe damage to production-process units had caused a complete halt of its production lines.[3]

  • A June 9 restart of Furnace No. 8 confirms some repair progress but does not verify restoration of integrated plant capacity, damaged power assets, or normal production availability.[2, 4]

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Case B

DRI, Semi-Finished Steel and Heavy Plate in Khuzestan Province

Khuzestan’s steel case is centred on the Ahvaz-based Khuzestan Steel Company: a direct-reduction and electric-arc-furnace producer with 3.8 Mt/yr recorded raw-steel capacity and a recently expanded DRI base. Its ownership link to Oxin Steel…[1, 5, 7, 8]

Key strengths

  • Khuzestan Steel had 3.82 Mt/yr of recorded DRI capacity and 3.8 Mt/yr of recorded raw-steel capacity in Ahvaz in 2023.[1]

  • Zamzam-3, commissioned in February 2024, was reported by its catalyst supplier to have reached nominal capacity; its stated DRI capacity is 2.2 Mt/yr.[8]

Key constraints

  • Khuzestan Steel said production lines were shut after March 2026 attacks; reporting based on its statement identified strikes on DRI Unit 2, Zamzam 3 and steelmaking.[12]

  • The IAEA recorded that a Khuzestan steel production facility using sealed radioactive sources was struck on March 27, 2026; it reported no radiological hazard after assessment.[7]

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Side-by-side assessment

Direct comparison

DimensionIntegrated Steelmaking and Flat-Steel Processing in Isfahan ProvinceDRI, Semi-Finished Steel and Heavy Plate in Khuzestan ProvinceAssessment
01Pre-disruption production scale Mobarakeh, Esfahan Steel and Saba represented 12.4 Mt/yr of recorded raw-steel capacity in the province. Khuzestan Steel represented 3.8 Mt/yr of recorded raw-steel capacity, plus an 800 kt/yr provincial DRI asset at Shadegan. Integrated Steelmaking and Flat-Steel Processing in Isfahan Province

Isfahan offers the wider production base and more diversified steelmaking footprint. Capacity is historic baseline evidence, not evidence of current availability.[1]

02Downstream product configuration The cluster is strongest in integrated steelmaking and flat-steel production, with a large established installed base. Khuzestan Steel’s ownership link to Oxin creates a direct semi-finished-steel to heavy-wide-plate route, including heat treatment. Balanced

Isfahan is better for broad flat-product process support; Khuzestan is more targeted for plate, pipe and heavy-industrial fabrication, if slab and plant availability recover.[1, 5]

03Verified post-strike recovery Mobarakeh reported a June 9 restart of Furnace No. 8 after damage and an earlier complete production halt. Khuzestan Steel reported a shutdown after damage to DRI Unit 2, Zamzam 3 and steelmaking; no credible public restart confirmation was found. Integrated Steelmaking and Flat-Steel Processing in Isfahan Province

Isfahan has limited but concrete evidence of recovery. This does not establish normal operation at Mobarakeh, while Khuzestan’s full-chain recovery remains unverified.[2, 3]

04Damage exposure in critical process stages Reported damage included a substation, alloy-steel line and power units at Mobarakeh. Reported damage included DRI Unit 2, the Zamzam-3 mega-module and steelmaking at Khuzestan Steel. Integrated Steelmaking and Flat-Steel Processing in Isfahan Province

Both have serious readiness issues. The reported Khuzestan impacts span upstream reduction and steelmaking, which may make integrated restart sequencing more complex; final comparison requires engineering inspection.[4]

05Maritime logistics option The researched core is inland, so the dossier does not establish direct port-linked operating readiness. Imam Khomeini Port and Khorramshahr are within the provincial commercial-port system; Oxin is located on the Ahvaz–Bandar Imam Khomeini road. DRI, Semi-Finished Steel and Heavy Plate in Khuzestan Province

Khuzestan has a stronger geographic basis for port-linked steel logistics. Current shipping, insurance and port handling conditions still require direct validation.[6, 11]

06JV entry logic Best framed as repair, spares, power-quality, process optimisation or flat-steel support around a large cluster. Best framed as DRI/steelmaking repair, heavy-plate conversion or pipe/fabrication support tied to specific recovered assets. Balanced

Both require narrow, contract-led local JVs rather than immediate core-asset investment. The technically appropriate offer differs by product chain and verified repair scope.[1, 5]

07Sanctions and transaction feasibility Steel-sector sanctions and counterparties’ state-linked structures constrain finance, equipment and service transactions. The same sector-wide sanctions apply; port-linked movement adds potential transport, insurance and payment-chain diligence. Balanced

Neither location offers a sanctions-light route. Legal feasibility is determined principally by the investor’s jurisdiction, product classification and complete counterparty chain, not provincial location.[1]

Best fit: Case A

Integrated Steelmaking and Flat-Steel Processing in Isfahan Province

  • A staged, compliance-cleared repair or industrial-service JV with a large existing flat-steel customer base.
  • Local manufacture of selected maintenance parts, non-controlled monitoring systems or mill-service consumables after site-access confirmation.
  • Operators whose product or service can serve several Isfahan steel assets rather than depend on one production line.
  • Projects able to begin with technical assessment and pilot work rather than capacity-dependent offtake.
  • Investors prepared to verify the extent of Mobarakeh’s recovery before committing capital equipment.

Best fit: Case B

DRI, Semi-Finished Steel and Heavy Plate in Khuzestan Province

  • A plate, pipe, tank, pressure-vessel or heavy-fabrication operator that can secure a recovered Oxin and slab-supply route.
  • A repair specialist capable of addressing DRI, reformer and steelmaking recovery packages under local execution.
  • A logistics-linked operator whose economics depend on provincial port access once cargo movement and security are validated.
  • Projects with a named local buyer and a unit-specific post-damage work scope.
  • Investors that can tolerate a longer development timetable while Khuzestan Steel’s restart status is proven.

Decision logic

Decisive trade-offs

  1. Isfahan offers larger and more diversified pre-disruption capacity; Khuzestan offers a more distinct DRI-to-heavy-plate and port-linked proposition.
  2. Isfahan has one public indicator of partial recovery; Khuzestan has no equivalent credible public restart confirmation in this review.
  3. Mobarakeh’s reported power-asset damage increases utility-restoration needs; Khuzestan’s reported impacts extend across DRI and steelmaking stages.
  4. Khuzestan’s port geography is valuable only if maritime movement, insurance and security are commercially usable.
  5. Both cases require a tightly scoped local JV rather than assumed access to core steel equity.
  6. Sanctions, export controls and payment feasibility can override otherwise favourable infrastructure in either province.

Final assessment

For the stated objective, Isfahan is the less speculative first diligence target because of its larger installed base and the verified partial restart at Mobarakeh. That conclusion is narrow: it supports a phased repair, localisation or reliability JV, not a conclusion that the cluster is fully operational. Khuzestan should be prioritised only for a defined heavy-plate, pipe, fabrication or port-linked proposition with a credible local buyer and direct evidence that affected DRI and steelmaking units can restart. In both cases, an investor should commit only after physical-condition, utility, security, compliance and payment diligence converts historic capacity into demonstrable operating readiness.[1, 2, 5, 6]

Due diligence agenda

What should be investigated next?

  • What is the unit-by-unit current operating state, repair budget and commissioning schedule at Mobarakeh and Khuzestan Steel?
  • Which units have verified electricity, gas, water, control-system and spare-parts availability for the next 12 months?
  • Which local counterparty has procurement authority, beneficial ownership transparency and a legally usable payment channel?
  • Can the proposed machinery, software, technical data and field service be lawfully supplied under all applicable sanctions and export-control regimes?
  • What specific damage and recovery status applies to Khuzestan Steel’s DRI Unit 2, Zamzam 3, melting and casting assets?
  • What are Oxin Steel’s current plate output, slab source, certifications, order book and relationship with Khuzestan Steel?
  • Can insurers, freight providers and port operators support the required logistics route and contract terms?
Data limitations and uncertainties
  • The most detailed independent capacity data are for 2023 and should not be read as current output.
  • Public reporting on March–June 2026 plant damage and restart is incomplete, sometimes company-derived, and not a substitute for engineering inspection.
  • No audited July 2026 utilisation, inventory, cash-flow, insurance, gas-allocation or water-supply data were located for either cluster.
  • A furnace-level restart does not prove integrated-plant recovery.
  • No full post-strike operational update was located for Khuzestan Steel.
  • Port inclusion establishes geographic infrastructure, not current shipping availability or export throughput.
  • This review does not provide legal advice or a sanctions determination.
  • Scope excludes other Iranian steel regions and non-steel industries in both provinces.
Research record24 sources used
  1. 2023 Minerals Yearbook: Iran U.S. Geological Survey · 2026-02
  2. Iran Restarts Damaged Furnace at Major Steel Plant After War Damage Tasnim News Agency · 2026-06-10
  3. Iran’s Mobarakeh Steel halts production completely following attacks SteelRadar · 2026-04-02
  4. Iranian steel plants damaged by air strikes: Update Argus Media · 2026-03-27
  5. Khouzestan Steel acquires control of Oxin Steel South East Asia Iron and Steel Institute · 2020-01-14
  6. Ports and Maritime Organization (PMO) International Association of Ports and Harbors
  7. Aerial and missile attacks on the Khuzestan Steel Production Factory International Atomic Energy Agency · 2026-03-30
  8. Zamzam 3 mega-module reached nominal capacity by using Khwarizmi catalysts Khwarizmi Technology Development Company
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  11. Khouzestan Oxin Steel Co Iran Metals Market · 2021-09-20
  12. US-Israeli airstrike hits Iran’s Khuzestan Steel Company, halts production lines Anadolu Agency · 2026-03-28
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This research is an initial market-intelligence comparison, not transaction-specific legal, tax, sanctions, or investment advice. Verify material facts before acting.