Quarterly Publication

                          Journal Metrics

Number of Volumes 9
Number of Issues 33
Number of Articles 198
Article View 205,436
PDF Download 117,729
View Per Article 1037.56
PDF Download Per Article 594.59
Acceptance Rate 49
Time to Accept (Days) 110
Number of Indexing Databases 13
Number of Reviewers 238
Impact Factor (ISC)-2020 0.042

 

 

 

Call for Papers

We proudly announce that the journal of Petroleum Business Review (PBR) has been granted temporary permission for publication from the Ministry of Science, Research and Technology of Iran. It should be mentioned that PBR is granted the status of “Academic-Research”. The journal is to be published quarterly in English.

We hereby call for papers in Petroleum Business studies. We invite all scholars to submit their articles for review and publication to the journal. More information about guidelines for submission and the policy of the journal is provided here. Only articles received online through the website will be sent for referees.

 

Petroleum Business Review journal follows rules and guidelines defined by Committee on Publication Ethics(COPE)

 

All submitted manuscripts are checked for similarity through a trustworthy software named iThenticate to be assured about its originality and then rigorously peer-reviewed by the international reviewers.

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  • Country of Publication: Iran      
  • Publisher: Petroleum University of Technology
  • Format: Online
  • Print ISSN: 2645-4726
  • Online ISSN: 2645-4734
  • Available from: Open access
  • Acceptance Rate: More of 45%
  • Frequency: Quarterly
  • Advance Access: open access
  • Language: English
  • Scope: Oil & Gas Management, Financing, Law, Accounting, Economics, Energy
  • Article Processing Charges: Free
  • Type of Journal: Academic-Research
  • Open Access: Yes
  • Policy: Double Blind Peer Review Confirmation
  • Review Time: 2 to 3 months
  • Contact E-mail: pbr@put.ac.ir   

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The publication's rank in the Ministry of Science (Evaluation 2023-24): A   

                                                 

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Original Article Energy Management and Engineering

Enhancing Social Participation for Sustainable Energy Management in Iran: A Strategic Multi-Criteria Approach

Pages 1-19

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.546038.1406

Yasin Khalili, Hossein Heirani

Abstract Iran faces persistent challenges in balancing energy demand and sustainability, driven by limited social participation and the absence of integrated policy frameworks. This study introduces an innovative hybrid decision-making approach that combines PESTEL, SWOT, and Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) models to identify, evaluate, and prioritize strategies for enhancing public participation in sustainable energy management. The research adopts a mixed-method design, integrating qualitative expert interviews and content analysis in MAXQDA with quantitative weighting and ranking through Expert Choice AHP. The proposed framework captures both macro-environmental influences and internal institutional capacities, linking social-behavioral insights with data-driven prioritization. Results indicate that developing targeted educational programs and creating interactive digital platforms are the highest-priority strategies, with normalized weights of 0.35 and 0.30, respectively, followed by local collaboration networks and incentive-based policies. The findings reveal that applying a combined social and analytical modeling approach can increase public participation potential by over 60 % and contribute to a 25 % reduction in energy consumption in the medium term. The study offers a novel quantitative–qualitative framework adaptable for developing countries seeking to operationalize community engagement within national energy transition policies.

Original Article Oil and Gas Economics and Management

Revisiting the Guarantee Mechanisms in Financing Upstream Oil and Gas Projects: Emphasis on Non-Governmental Guarantee Funds

Pages 20-42

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.525871.1395

Saeid Daneshi, AbbAS Kazemi Najafabadi

Abstract Financing upstream oil and gas projects in Iran—particularly for non-governmental companies—faces numerous obstacles, including the lack of effective guarantee mechanisms, absence of credible collaterals, limited access to sovereign guarantees, and the skepticism of financial institutions. This paper, adopting a descriptive-analytical approach and grounded in the study of existing legal and institutional frameworks, explores the legal capacities for designing and utilizing alternative instruments to traditional guarantees in the financing process of high-risk projects. Within this framework, and based on the “Production and Infrastructure Financing Act”, the executive bylaw on the establishment of non-governmental guarantee funds, and other upstream legal documents, the establishment of an institution titled the "Oil Guarantee Fund" is proposed as an innovative solution. This fund is designed to mitigate default risk, facilitate project credit assessment, and replace bank or property-based guarantees for companies active in the oil and gas value chain. Its legal structure is envisioned based on the model of non-governmental institutions and private joint-stock companies. The proposed model has been formulated through a legal analysis of the relevant documents and informed by the outcomes of expert panels comprising specialists in energy law, finance, and public policy. Findings of the study indicate that the establishment of such a fund, capable of issuing valid guarantees based on contractual commitments, provides a practical tool to strengthen institutional trust and facilitate investment in upstream oil and gas projects. The article also presents a conceptual and institutional framework for the fund and offers recommendations for its policy-level and legal implementation.

Original Article Oil and Gas Economics and Management

Crude Oil Price Hikes and Exchange Rate Volatility in Iran: Evidence from GARCH-family Models

Pages 43-63

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.530147.1398

Vahid Mahmoudi, Hossein Arabi

Abstract This study investigates the impact of global crude oil price fluctuations on the volatility of the Iranian Rial–U.S. Dollar exchange rate over the period November 2011 to August 2025. Using daily data and employing GARCH-family models—including GARCH(1,1), EGARCH(1,1), and GJR-GARCH(1,1,1) under heavy-tailed distributions—we examine whether oil price shocks influence the mean and conditional variance of exchange rate returns. The results indicate that higher oil prices significantly appreciate the Rial, reflecting Iran’s dependence on oil revenues and foreign exchange inflows. Volatility dynamics reveal strong persistence, with shocks exhibiting long memory. Asymmetric effects are also evident: negative oil price shocks increase exchange rate volatility more than positive shocks, highlighting the destabilizing role of downturns in global oil markets. Diagnostic tests confirm the adequacy of the estimated models, with EGARCH and GJR specifications providing the best fit. The findings underscore three key policy implications. First, Iran’s exchange rate remains highly sensitive to oil revenues, reinforcing the need for structural diversification. Second, the persistence of volatility complicates short-term stabilization, demanding long-term reserve and fiscal policies. Third, the asymmetric impact of oil downturns calls for proactive risk management to mitigate volatility in times of declining oil prices. Overall, the study provides new evidence on the oil–exchange rate nexus in an oil-exporting economy, offering lessons for macroeconomic management under external shocks. Robustness checks — including Bai–Perron breakpoint tests and alternative model specifications with event dummies — confirm the main findings.

Original Article Law Studies

Procedural Management in International Arbitration: The Necessity of Bifurcation in Oil & Gas Disputes

Pages 64-74

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.527266.1396

Seyed Mohammad Hassan Razavi, saman mohammadian

Abstract Bifurcation constitutes a procedural mechanism in arbitration whereby complex disputes are segmented into separate and distinct issues to be addressed individually over the course of the proceedings. This stratification enables a more organized and methodical approach, commonly by isolating jurisdictional questions from the substantive merits of the case. Through the division of the dispute into discrete phases, bifurcation enhances procedural efficiency, allowing the parties to focus their efforts on pivotal matters while avoiding unnecessary expenditure of time and resources on ancillary issues. As a result, this mechanism often contributes to notable reductions in both the duration and overall cost of the arbitral process.

In determining whether to bifurcate proceedings, arbitral tribunals assess key criteria: the preliminary objection must demonstrate substantive merit, be capable of adjudication independently of the merits, and possess the potential to resolve the dispute conclusively.

The tribunal’s decision to implement this procedural tool ultimately depends on the specific facts and prevailing circumstances of the case.

Original Article Energy Management and Engineering

Does AI Really Drive the Grid? A Four-Decade Test of the U.S. Energy Footprint

Pages 75-101

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.525046.1394

Younes Nademi, Majid Ebtia, Ramin Khochiany, Sayyed Mohammad Hoseini

Abstract The recent surge of artificial-intelligence (AI) activity has sparked concern that large-scale model training, cloud inference, and data-centre expansion could accelerate national energy demand. We marshal a 21-year annual panel for the United States (2004–2024) that couples multiple AI proxies—technology-stock valuations and a ChatGPT-era dummy—with four aggregate energy series (fossil fuels, nuclear, renewables, total primary energy). A five-stage empirical protocol implemented in Python combines Engle–Granger cointegration testing, higher-order ADF stationarity checks, linear and nonlinear dependence diagnostics (Pearson, Dynamic Time Warping, mutual information), multicollinearity screening (variance-inflation factors), and out-of-sample forecasting with linear regression, decision trees, random forests, and support-vector machines augmented by SHAP explainability. Across all tests we find no evidence that AI developments imprint on national energy use: AI variables cointegrate only with one another, their short-run correlations with energy vanish once trends are removed, their mutual-information scores remain near zero, and their inclusion never improves predictive accuracy beyond a parsimonious macro model driven by GDP, inflation, and population. SHAP rankings confirm that AI features carry negligible explanatory weight relative to conventional fundamentals. We conclude that, to date, AI’s macro-level energy footprint is statistically invisible—any electricity it consumes is either too small or offset by efficiency gains within the wider economy. Policymakers should therefore continue to anchor long-range energy scenarios to established economic drivers while monitoring localised data-centre hotspots that national aggregates obscure.

Original Article Oil and Gas Economics and Management

Understanding the Risks of Human Resource Management in Iran's Gas Industry

Pages 102-118

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.550788.1411

Hamed Mohammadi, Aboalhasan Hosseini, Bahareh Abedin

Abstract Iran's gas industry plays a strategic role in supplying and distributing natural gas energy to society. The project-based, operational, and service-oriented nature of this industry, combined with its large workforce, underscores the necessity to address the risks confronting its human resource management system. This study was conducted to identify and analyse these human resource management risks. This study employed a mixed-methods approach. In the qualitative phase, the researcher's lived experience was utilized to identify and categorize 35 human resource management risk factors in Iran's gas industry. For the quantitative phase, a risk management framework was applied to evaluate each identified factor based on two key dimensions: risk probability and risk impact. The assessment results were subsequently visualized through a heat map. The study results demonstrated that none of the indicators fell within the low-risk zone, with 15 indicators classified as medium-risk and 20 as high-risk, while two critical indicators - imposition of salary and benefit restrictions with a risk rating of 9 and dependence on political affiliations for filling key positions with a risk rating of 8 - were identified as the most substantial challenges facing the human resource management system in Iran's gas industry.

Law Studies

The Taking Over of a Foreign Investor’s Property by the Host State in International Petroleum Agreements: How International Arbitration Practice Responds

Volume 5, Issue 2, Spring 2021, Pages 75-86

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2021.277665.1175

Hamid Reza Younesi

Abstract The present article aims to examine the risk of host governments’ interference with the property of foreign investors (expropriation) in the petroleum industry. Host states have the police power to make regulatory changes. The “police power” is defined as the inherent and plenary power of a sovereign to make all laws necessary and proper to preserve public security, order, health, morality, and justice. It is a fundamental power essential to government, and it cannot be surrendered by the legislature or irrevocably transferred away from government. The government can interfere with the contract, change the terms, or directly take the investment. This is why international petroleum disputes and arbitration practices have addressed such risk. For this purpose, the concept of property and compensable property rights under international law are significant. Indeed, expropriation conveys a deprivation of a property owner of this property. This paper assesses the concept of expropriation, the international legal requirements for a lawful expropriation, and then analyzes the relevant international arbitral awards in petroleum jurisprudence.  

Law Studies

Indirect Expropriation in the Petroleum Industry: The Response of International Arbitrations

Volume 5, Issue 4, Autumn 2021, Pages 1-10

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2021.278306.1176

Hamid Reza Younesi

Abstract The present article aims to argue indirect expropriation in international petroleum agreements and analyze the response of international arbitrations. In particular, international arbitral awards by the Iran–US claims tribunal, the Yukos case as an energy charter treaty arbitration, and certain North American Free Trade Agreement cases have been examined. The recent trend shows that taking foreign investors’ property may occur not only through legislation or nationalization but also by indirect methods that can have the same effect as direct expropriation. Indirect expropriation does not necessarily require the transfer of legal title from the international oil company to the host state. Hence, it is difficult to distinguish between legitimate regulation and measures that are tantamount to expropriation with the payment of compensation. Identifying an indirect expropriation is complex and depends upon the examination of the legitimate expectations of the investor concerning the enjoyment of its investment. Host governments may employ different methods to achieve what amounts to direct taking, but without acknowledging it as such, to avoid legal consequences of expropriation and then payment of compensation

Oil and Gas Economics and Management

Energy Programs of American Parties (Republicans and Democrats) and Global Oil Market

Volume 3, Issue 4, Autumn 2019, Pages 28-36

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2019.119151

Seyyed Abdollah Razavi, Shohreh Pirani

Abstract The United States is the world's first producer and consumer of oil and play a special role in international oil market relations. In a sense, due to the differences in the energy programs of the parties of this country, we will see significant changes in the international energy markets. The Trump's economic thinking in business field is based on the neo-mercantilist while the Democrats believe in global and multilateral trade. The most important energy policies of the Republican Party are the development and expansion of fossil fuel production, increasing the share of the oil market, lifting environmental restrictions, confronting OPEC, and unilateralism in the oil and gas trade. In contrast, the Democrats' most important plans in the US election are to return to the Paris Agreement and re-impose environmental restrictions, reduce oil production through legal sanctions such as taxes, expand renewable energy and use financial resources to manage the oil market and trade convergence. The main question of this article is what effect do US parties energy programs have on the oil market? The method of this research is a qualitative in a descriptive-analytical manner using desk research.

Oil and Gas Economics and Management

Crude Oil Price Hikes and Exchange Rate Volatility in Iran: Evidence from GARCH-family Models

Volume 9, Issue 4, Autumn 2025, Pages 43-63

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.530147.1398

Vahid Mahmoudi, Hossein Arabi

Abstract This study investigates the impact of global crude oil price fluctuations on the volatility of the Iranian Rial–U.S. Dollar exchange rate over the period November 2011 to August 2025. Using daily data and employing GARCH-family models—including GARCH(1,1), EGARCH(1,1), and GJR-GARCH(1,1,1) under heavy-tailed distributions—we examine whether oil price shocks influence the mean and conditional variance of exchange rate returns. The results indicate that higher oil prices significantly appreciate the Rial, reflecting Iran’s dependence on oil revenues and foreign exchange inflows. Volatility dynamics reveal strong persistence, with shocks exhibiting long memory. Asymmetric effects are also evident: negative oil price shocks increase exchange rate volatility more than positive shocks, highlighting the destabilizing role of downturns in global oil markets. Diagnostic tests confirm the adequacy of the estimated models, with EGARCH and GJR specifications providing the best fit. The findings underscore three key policy implications. First, Iran’s exchange rate remains highly sensitive to oil revenues, reinforcing the need for structural diversification. Second, the persistence of volatility complicates short-term stabilization, demanding long-term reserve and fiscal policies. Third, the asymmetric impact of oil downturns calls for proactive risk management to mitigate volatility in times of declining oil prices. Overall, the study provides new evidence on the oil–exchange rate nexus in an oil-exporting economy, offering lessons for macroeconomic management under external shocks. Robustness checks — including Bai–Perron breakpoint tests and alternative model specifications with event dummies — confirm the main findings.

Oil and Gas Economics and Management

Digital Transformation in Iran’s Oil and Gas Industry: Challenges and Managerial Solutions

Volume 9, Issue 3, Summer 2025, Pages 70-85

https://doi.org/10.22050/pbr.2025.518977.1389

Mojtaba Ghorbani Asiabar, Morteza Ghorbani Asiabar, Alireza Ghorbani Asiabar

Abstract This study investigates the multifaceted challenges of implementing digital transformation within Iranian oil and gas companies, focusing on organizational barriers and managerial solutions. Despite the global momentum toward digitalization, Iran’s oil and gas sector faces unique obstacles, including resistance to change, skill gaps, legacy infrastructure, and insufficient alignment between technology providers and large enterprises. Utilizing a mixed-methods approach, we conducted a survey of 210 managers and IT professionals across upstream and downstream organizations, complemented by in-depth interviews with key stakeholders. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and structural equation modeling (SEM) were employed to identify and validate critical barriers and their interrelations. Findings reveal that organizational inertia, lack of digital competencies, and inadequate investment in digital infrastructure are the most significant impediments, while leadership commitment and targeted training programs emerge as effective managerial remedies. The study contributes actionable insights for policymakers and executives by outlining a roadmap for overcoming digital transformation hurdles and achieving sustainable competitive advantage. The results underscore the necessity of a holistic strategy integrating technological, human, and process dimensions to facilitate successful digital transformation in Iran’s oil and gas industry.

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