Hamid Amini (46) confirmed killed in Iran: – Norwegian interests in the firing line
It started with a name that appeared in internal messages. Hamid Amini. For most, it was just a name. For the employees at DNV, and for a family in mourning, he was a father, a colleague, a friend. Now, the 46-year-old has been confirmed killed in what is described as a coordinated attack in Iran. But this is far more than a tragedy affecting one individual. It's a wake-up call for the entire Norwegian establishment.
From business partner to target
While we back home have been following the name Hamid Aminikhah and the other ways it's been spelled in various documents, the reality in the Middle East has taken a dramatic turn. What many might not have realised is that Norway isn't just a random bystander in this drama. We actually have substantial interests in Iran. Just a few weeks ago, a massive deal worth 40 billion kroner was signed to build solar parks in the Iranian desert. The company behind it? Norwegian Saga Energy, which entered into a partnership with Iranian players. Behind the scenes, Norwegian diplomats were simultaneously working to open doors in oil, gas, and shipping.
It was a balancing act. An optimistic push into renewable energy and diplomatic engagement, while tensions simmered beneath the surface. Then came February 28. The day Israel and the US managed to track down and kill Iran's supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, in a precision strike. The door Norway had so optimistically been knocking on was blown to smithereens.
The retaliation that hit us
What happened next wasn't surprising to anyone who's followed the region for years, nor to the Iranians themselves. They had a plan. Before his death, Khamenei and his generals had laid out a strategy for a "regional escalation". The plan was clear: if the leadership was taken out, retaliation would be ruthless and far-reaching. The targets weren't just military, but also economic symbols. They aimed to hit Western interests hard, create fear, and bring world markets to their knees.
And that's where Hamid Amini, or Hamid Amini Moghadam as he has also been referred to, came into the picture. Preliminary information from intelligence circles suggests he was in the city of Lamerd, a place that isn't necessarily a military hub in itself. But in a time when anyone with a connection to the West is in the danger zone, even a "civilian" area can become a battlefield. DNV, one of Norway's most reputable companies, has now lost one of its own. His Norwegian passport, meant to be a protection, was of little help when the rockets fell.
What does this mean for Norwegian business?
This is the big, uncomfortable question we now have to ask ourselves. The death of Hamid Amini moves the conflict from the geopolitical opinion pages straight into the boardroom of every Norwegian company with ambitions beyond Norway's borders. Suddenly, "risk" is no longer an abstract concept in a PowerPoint presentation. It has become deadly serious. Let's break it down:
- Employee safety: Suddenly, Norwegian citizens in the region are no longer "neutral". They can be seen as extensions of an enemy. Evacuation and security become the sole priority.
- Frozen billions: What happens to the 40 billion from the solar deal? And all the other investments that were in the pipeline? They're essentially worthless as long as the conflict rages. Insurance companies are unlikely to pay out for "acts of war".
- Reputation and ethics: Can a Norwegian company justify doing business in a country at war, where its own citizens are being killed?
A geopolitical earthquake with local aftershocks
It's easy to see this as just the beginning. The EU is holding crisis meetings, and the oil price is through the roof. For us in Norway, that means higher prices at the petrol pump, but it also means something far more serious: it means we have to reassess our entire approach to international markets. We can no longer distinguish between "safe" and "unsafe" zones in the same way. When a Norwegian citizen, an engineer or a businessperson, can become a victim in a conflict they're not a part of, then the world has changed.
Hamid Amini is not just a statistic in a larger conflict. He is a symbol of the fragility that characterises our times. A time where economic ties can become death sentences, and where Norwegian lives become the price of others' power plays. Our thoughts are now with his family. For Norwegian businesses, however, it's time for a brutal awakening. The risk assessments need to be rewritten.