Tuesday, 26 August 2025
08:41
تاریخ بروزرسانی
Tuesday, 26 August 2025
08:34
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Addressing legal and policy advances, Hashemi cited provisions in
the 2025 budget law and mandates in the Seventh Development Plan that allocate
resources for cybersecurity. “Digital security is a national necessity,” he
said, adding that lawmakers have designated funding to establish Managed
Security Service Provider (MSSP) centers and to bolster the cybersecurity
sector.
Private sector at the center of cybersecurity
drive
Hashemi emphasized that security solutions will not emerge solely from government
entities. “Security will not be created within the government alone; the
private sector must be the axis of this movement,” he said. He praised Iranian
firms’ progress in cyber defense and expressed confidence that, with continued
support, domestic companies will achieve greater growth and prominence in the
field.
Technology diplomacy and international presence
On the role of technology diplomacy, Hashemi linked international engagement
with the government’s broader digital-economy targets. To reach a 10 percent
contribution of the digital sector to gross domestic product, he argued, Iran
must pursue two priorities: expanding into global markets and raising domestic
productivity. “Achieving this goal is not possible without an active presence
of Iranian companies on the international stage,” he said.
Highlighting successful projects completed by Iranian firms in Latin
America and Africa — including telecommunications and fiber-optic deployments —
Hashemi noted that competition with established global brands demonstrates
domestic capability. “With appropriate support, we can win a larger share of
international markets,” he added.
Smart industries and resource savings
Hashemi identified industrial digitization as another national priority,
underscoring potential efficiency gains from information and communications
technology. “Information technology can reduce energy consumption by up to
20 percent,” he said,
estimating annual savings on the order of $20 billion. He pointed to mining,
steel and petrochemical sectors as areas where digital transformation could
deliver significant resource and cost efficiencies.
He also called for collaboration between network operators and the
private sector to build the infrastructure necessary for industrial
modernization, describing such cooperation as a potential turning point for the
country’s industrial transformation.
“Iran Digital” to develop future workforce
The minister introduced the “Digital Iran” initiative as a flagship project of
the ministry aimed at preparing the next generation for digital careers. The
program, he said, begins with digital skills training at the secondary-school
level and seeks to steer students and university graduates into digital
entrepreneurship and employment. “In this pathway, content production and
practical skills will replace formal credentials alone,” Hashemi said.
He noted plans to implement the initiative in partnership with the
Ministry of Education, private companies, and provincial firms, naming Yazd —
which ranks highly on several digital transformation indicators — as an early
focal point for building the Digital Iran ecosystem.
Data transit and Iran’s geopolitical role
Turning to regional connectivity, Hashemi highlighted Iran’s growing role in
data transit. He reported that the country’s data transit capacity rose by more
than 60 percent over the past year and said authorities aim for 500 percent
growth. “Given Iran’s geopolitical position, we can become one of the main
routes for data transfer from Asia to Europe and the Persian Gulf,” he said.
The minister’s remarks underscore a government push to combine
domestic capacity-building, private-sector engagement and international
outreach as Iran seeks to expand its digital economy, enhance cybersecurity
resilience and leverage its geographic position in regional data flows.