"The international agreement for the development of phase 11 of South Pars will be signed on Monday in the presence of the oil ministry and managers of Total, the Chinese company CNPC and Iranian company Petropars," a ministry spokesman told AFP.
Total signed a preliminary deal with Iran in November, taking a 50.1 per cent stake in the USD 4.8 billion project.
China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) will own 30 per cent and Petropars 19.9 per cent.
The gas produced will "feed into the domestic Iranian market starting from 2021," a Total spokesman told AFP in Paris.
He said the company would "implement the project with the strictest respect for national and international law".
The contract was initially due to be signed in early 2017, but CEO Patrick Pouyanne said in February that Total would wait to see whether the US administration of President Donald Trump reimposed sanctions on Iran.
Trump threatened during his campaign to tear up the landmark accord between Iran and six world powers that came into force in January 2016 and eased sanctions in exchange for curbs to Tehran's nuclear programme.
But the White House has kept the nuclear deal alive, continuing to waive the relevant sanctions every few months as required under the agreement.
It is partway through a 90-day review on whether to uphold the deal, although any move to abandon it would be strongly opposed by the other signatories -- Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia.
The signing will mark Total's return to Iran, which has the second-largest gas reserves and fourth-largest oil reserves in the world.
But it was forced to abandon its projects in Iran in 2012 when France joined European Union partners in imposing sanctions, including an oil embargo, over the country's nuclear programme.
Iran's oil officials have been keen to attract Western investment and know-how to improve the country's outdated energy infrastructure.
Iran has also signed preliminary agreements with Shell and Russia's Gazprom to develop oil and gas projects.
Such deals have not been without controversy in Iran, which has bitter memories of exploitation and interventions driven by foreign oil interests.
That forced the oil ministry to confirm that domestic conglomerates, including one controlled by the elite Revolutionary Guards, would be allowed to compete.
The first stage of the new 20-year project at South Pars will cost around USD 2 billion and consist of 30 wells and two well-head platforms connected to existing onshore treatment facilities.
The site will eventually pump 50.9 million cubic metres of gas per day into Iran's national grid.
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