Hormuz Market Case

Copper and Iron-Steel Complexes in Kerman

Kerman combines two nationally significant but operationally distinct metals systems: copper around Sarcheshmeh, Miduk and Shahr-e Babak, and iron ore-to-DRI/steel activity around Sirjan and Gol Gohar. This offers an industrial entrant a broad installed customer…

Researched July 12, 2026 Confidence: Medium 16 sources

Case in brief

Kerman combines two nationally significant but operationally distinct metals systems: copper around Sarcheshmeh, Miduk and Shahr-e Babak, and iron ore-to-DRI/steel activity around Sirjan and Gol Gohar. This offers an industrial entrant a broad installed customer base for mining equipment, process technology, maintenance, water recovery and downstream fabrication. The principal limitation is not resource presence but investability: major anchor operators are designated under US sanctions, while water, electricity, imports and cross-border payments constrain reliable plant operation. A compliant JV must therefore begin with counterparty, ownership and end-use screening rather than conventional market-entry work.[1, 2, 3, 4]

Research scope: The evidence is concentrated in the Sarcheshmeh-Miduk copper system and the Sirjan/Gol Gohar iron ore, DRI and steel corridor; it does not represent every mineral activity in Kerman Province.

Investment frame

How this market case works

Market structure

Kerman’s mining-metals intersection is organized around large integrated complexes rather than a diffuse small-mine economy. NICICO operates the Sarcheshmeh complex south of Rafsanjan and Kerman-based Miduk assets, spanning ore, concentration, smelting and refining. In the Sirjan corridor, Gol Gohar and affiliated operators link multiple iron ore deposits to concentration, pelletizing, DRI and steel assets. USGS identifies Gol Gohar 1–5 as separate deposits owned by different companies, so regional output should not be treated as Gol Gohar Mining and Industrial Company output alone. The structure supports suppliers, contractors and localized component manufacturing, but is concentrated among large state-linked or institutional groups.

Investor access

For a foreign industrial operator, a conventional equity JV with the province’s largest copper, iron ore or steel anchors faces acute sanctions, banking and export-control risk. OFAC designated NICICO, Golgohar Mining and Industrial Company and several associated iron-and-steel producers for operating in Iran’s metals sectors; this is particularly consequential for U.S. persons and may create secondary-sanctions exposure for other parties and financial institutions. A more defensible route, subject to specialist legal advice, is a locally incorporated manufacturing or service venture serving screened, non-designated customers, with no prohibited technology, controlled items, payments or designated-party involvement. Technical partnerships also require auditable beneficial-ownership, end-use, logistics and payment controls. Local production reduces some import-delay exposure but does not cure sanctions risk.

Investment signals

Strengths and constraints

Strengths

  • Verified fact

    Kerman contains both a large copper-processing chain and a separate iron ore-to-DRI/steel corridor, giving a supplier more than one industrial demand base.[1]

  • Verified fact

    The Sarcheshmeh complex produced 738,665 tonnes gross weight of copper concentrate in 2023; USGS lists mine, smelter, refinery and electrowinning assets at the Kerman site.[1]

  • Verified fact

    Gol Gohar 1–5 near Sirjan had distinct reported reserves and 2023 production across several owners, evidencing a dense iron ore corridor rather than a single-asset market.[1]

  • Analytical inference

    The coexistence of ore handling, concentration, DRI, steel and copper conversion increases the practical addressable market for wear parts, process controls, water treatment and maintenance services.[1]

  • Verified fact

    Sirjan’s industrial cluster has documented water-recovery infrastructure, indicating that operators are investing in water-efficiency measures rather than relying solely on fresh-water availability.[4]

Constraints

  • Verified fact

    NICICO and Golgohar Mining and Industrial Company are among Iranian metals companies designated by OFAC, restricting direct dealings by U.S. persons and creating material compliance and financing risk for others.[2]

  • Analytical inference

    Kerman’s largest anchor customers are concentrated, so a JV dependent on one complex would have high counterparty and procurement-cycle exposure.[1]

  • Verified fact

    Water stress and energy shortages are economy-wide constraints already identified by the World Bank as disrupting Iranian economic activity; they are material to energy- and water-intensive metals operations.[3]

  • Analytical inference

    Recent expansion claims at Sarcheshmeh and Sirjan are unevenly disclosed in accessible primary sources; current commissioning, utilization and offtake status require direct verification.[1, 8]

  • Analytical inference

    Distance from export ports adds logistics dependence, even though Sirjan is closer to southern corridors than the Sarcheshmeh copper complex.[1]

Opportunity hypotheses

Where a viable entry thesis may exist

Evidence-backedPlausibleExploratory
01
Investment thesisPlausible

Mining equipment wear-parts and rebuild JV

Establish local manufacture and certified rebuilding of crusher, mill, conveyor, pump and slurry-system wear components for the Sirjan iron ore and Kerman copper corridors.[1, 5]

Demand trigger
High-throughput extraction and beneficiation assets require recurrent replacement parts and downtime reduction.
Likely buyer
Screened mining contractors, private suppliers and non-designated industrial operators.
Entry route
Minority JV with a local machining, foundry or maintenance partner; begin with non-controlled components and traceable local sourcing.
Key uncertainty
Whether viable demand can be served without direct or indirect transactions involving designated end users or restricted technical data.
02
Investment thesisEvidence-backed

Copper tailings and slag-recovery technology partnership

Provide modular flotation, sampling and process-control packages for recovery improvement at copper tailings or slag streams in the Sarcheshmeh area.[1, 9]

Demand trigger
USGS recorded a slag-flotation expansion and later Sarcheshmeh concentrate-expansion phases, showing a technical focus on incremental recovery.
Likely buyer
Screened copper-industry service contractors and project companies.
Entry route
Technology license, pilot unit and performance-based local assembly through a compliant Iranian engineering partner.
Key uncertainty
Direct project ownership, sanctions status of every participant, and the availability of permitted flotation controls and reagents.
03
Investment thesisEvidence-backed

Industrial water-recovery and effluent-treatment JV

Deploy closed-loop water recovery, thickening and effluent-treatment systems to reduce freshwater intensity in Sirjan’s ore and steel operations.[3, 4, 6]

Demand trigger
Industrial water stress and existing Golgohar recovery investments create a clear operating need for reuse and loss reduction.
Likely buyer
Industrial utilities, mine operators and industrial-zone service companies.
Entry route
Build-own-operate service contract or equipment-and-operations JV with a local water-engineering contractor.
Key uncertainty
Water tariffs, enforceable long-term offtake contracts, power availability and buyer sanctions screening.
04
Investment thesisPlausible

Localized industrial spare-parts and reverse-engineering cell

Create a quality-controlled local cell for non-controlled spare parts, small-batch machining, inspection and documented reverse engineering for legacy mining and process equipment.[1, 7]

Demand trigger
Import delays and broad installed equipment bases increase the value of shortened maintenance cycles.
Likely buyer
Independent maintenance firms, workshops and screened industrial plants.
Entry route
JV with a local machine shop, including metrology, materials testing and quality documentation.
Key uncertainty
Intellectual-property boundaries, controlled-technology restrictions and sufficient buyer volume outside sanctioned counterparties.

Companies connected to this market case

Relevant companies

Assets and infrastructure shaping execution

Relevant infrastructure

  • integrated copper mine-processing-metallurgy complex

    Sarcheshmeh Copper Mine

    The complex combines copper mining, concentration, smelting, refining and electrowinning south of Rafsanjan.[1]

    Open Hormuz profile
  • multi-owner iron ore corridor

    Gol Gohar Mining and Industrial Complex

    Five major iron ore mines near Sirjan support concentration, DRI and steel demand in the corridor.[1]

    Open Hormuz profile
  • downstream iron-metallurgy capacity

    Sirjan Rail and Logistics Hub

    USGS lists Gol Gohar, Sirjan Iranian Steel and Sirjan Jahan Steel direct-reduction plants in Kerman Province.[1]

    Open Hormuz profile
  • Infrastructure connected to both selected entities

    Zarand Coal Mining Area

    Zarand Coal Mining Area matters in the Hormuz Graph as a coal-mining district in northern Kerman, connected to mining services, industrial fuel and materials logic, steel-related input chains, and road-rail logistics toward Kerman, Yazd, and central Iran. Its role differs from Kerman’s iron-ore nodes around Sirjan and Bafq-facing corridors because Zarand is [13]

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  • Infrastructure connected to both selected entities

    Jalalabad Iron Ore Mine

    Jalalabad Iron Ore Mine matters in the Hormuz Graph as part of Kerman Province’s iron-ore and metals geography, complementing larger mining-industrial nodes around Sirjan and central Kerman. Its role connects mineral extraction, mining services, freight movement, equipment demand, and steel-sector materials flows in a province where mines shape industrial la[14]

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  • Infrastructure connected to both selected entities

    Sirjan Special Economic Zone

    Sirjan Special Economic Zone matters in the Hormuz Graph because it sits inside Kerman’s mining, metals, and logistics geography, close to Gol Gohar-linked materials flows and routes toward Bandar Abbas, Yazd, and central Iran. Its role connects special-zone regulation, industrial land, warehousing, manufacturing, rail-road freight, and mineral-based supply [15]

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What changed

Recent developments

2023 · Under construction

Sarcheshmeh phases 3 and 4 were reported as started

USGS reports that two additional Sarcheshmeh expansion phases started in 2023 and were designed to add 622,000 tonnes per year of copper concentrate capacity and 6,115 tonnes per year of molybdenum capacity. Current commissioning and actual output were not verified in accessible sources.[1]

Why it matters: If commissioned, the project would deepen demand for concentration, materials handling, water and maintenance systems; it should not be treated as operational without site-level confirmation.

2025-01-01 · Operational

Golgohar Steel second sponge-iron unit reportedly inaugurated

A sector publication reported that a 1.5-million-tonne-per-year second sponge-iron unit was inaugurated in Sirjan during a presidential visit. Independent primary confirmation and current utilization were not found.[8]

Why it matters: The reported addition would enlarge the Sirjan DRI service and consumables market, but the capacity and operating rate require confirmation directly from the operator.

Hormuz knowledge graph

Connected intelligence

Supporting Hormuz pages that extend the same market story and help verify its context.

5 connected pages
Data gaps and verification needs
  • Mine-by-mine operating costs, grades, utilization and procurement budgets.
  • Plant-specific water allocations, recycled-water volumes and power-curtailment history.
  • Current rail capacity, freight tariffs and port-routing economics for individual Kerman sites.
  • Local content, licensing and customs treatment for a foreign-owned equipment-manufacturing JV.
Research record16 sources used
  1. The Mineral Industry of Iran in 2023 U.S. Geological Survey · 2025-01-01
  2. Treasury Targets Iran’s Billion Dollar Metals Industry and Senior Regime Officials U.S. Department of the Treasury · 2020-01-10
  3. Islamic Republic of Iran Country Overview World Bank · 2026-01-01
  4. Golgohar Water Recovery Project – Phase 3 Parsab Niroo
  5. hormuz.group
  6. hormuz.group
  7. hormuz.group
  8. Pezeshkian inaugurates key industrial, energy projects in Kerman RoydadNaft · 2025-01-01
  9. hormuz.group
  10. hormuz.group
  11. Treasury Sanctions Key Actors in Iran’s Steel Sector U.S. Department of the Treasury · 2021-01-05
  12. hormuz.group
  13. hormuz.group
  14. hormuz.group
  15. hormuz.group
  16. hormuz.group

This market case is an initial intelligence brief. Verify operating, legal, tax, sanctions, ownership, capacity, and counterparty details before acting.