The 107-member French investor team is the largest European business delegation in over 30 years. They met private Iranian business leaders today and are to attend an Iranian-French business conference tomorrow.
Executives from some of France's biggest companies, including energy giants Total, telecoms group Orange, power company GDF Suez, carmaker Renault and engineering firm Alstom are just part of the delegation on the three-day visit.
Semiofficial Fars news agency said other economic sectors such as information technology and hotel groups, as well as financial, banking and investment, water, aviation, cement, food industry, shipping, insurance and pharmaceutical companies are also represented in the delegation.
Under the six-month interim deal, Iran halted its most sensitive uranium enrichment activities in return for an easing of Western sanctions over its controversial nuclear program.
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Iran stopped enriching uranium to 20 per cent, which is just steps away from weapons-grade, and started neutralising its stockpile of it on January 20 to meet its obligations under the historic accord. The US and the EU simultaneously announced the lifting of sanctions on petrochemical products, insurance, gold and other precious metals, as well as the auto industry and parts and services for passenger planes.
Iran's state TV said the French business leaders met Iranian president's chief of staff, Mohammad Nahavandian, a US-educated economist who until recently headed Iran's Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Mines. He urged French business leaders to look at long-term projects in Iran.
"At negotiations, look long-term, not short-term. Whoever looks long-term in Iran will be the winner," the semiofficial ISNA news agency quoted him as saying. "Iran is not only a market of 75 million people. It's the gate to Central Asia, a market of 350 million people."