Factbox: European companies respond to latest Iran sanctions

Reuters 

(Reuters) - New U.S. took effect on Tuesday, and Donald Trump, who defied Washington's allies to impose them, pledged that companies doing business with would be barred from doing business with the

German car and has dropped plans to expand its business.

"We have ceased our already restricted activities in in accordance with the applicable sanctions", said.

In early 2016, Daimler established a joint venture with and to make and distribute trucks in the country.

and RENAULT

manufacturer began taking steps in June to suspend its joint venture activities in Iran while rival has said it will adhere to the U.S. sanctions regime.

Both had until Aug 6 to wind down their operations.

A said the company had no comment to make beyond what said in July, when he told analysts: "As we comply fully with U.S. sanctions, it's likely that our development would be put on hold."

After the nuclear accord was agreed in 2015 both and moved swiftly to sign new production deals to upgrade their pre-sanctions partnerships in Iran.

PSA signed production deals worth 700 million euros, while Renault announced a new plant investment to increase production capacity to 350,000 vehicles a year.

TOTAL

Total has said it will quit the multibillion-dollar if it cannot secure a waiver from the U.S. sanctions - a request French said last month had been rejected along with others by French corporations. [nL5N1SN5HZ ]

Total signed a contract in 2017 to develop Phase II of the field with an initial investment of $1 billion and has not yet said what it will do with its 30 percent stake should it pull out. It has until Nov 4 to wind down its Iran operations, barring any surprise exemption.

ATR

Turboprop aircraft maker on Aug 6 confirmed it had delivered five more planes to IranAir shortly before imposed new sanctions but still faces difficulties obtaining U.S. permission to hand over another seven on order.

SANOFI

Drugmaker said it was premature to say if there will be any impact on its operations in Iran.

announced in early 2016 that it had signed an MoU with aimed at bolstering its presence in Iran. Medicines were exempted from the original nuclear sanctions although shipping drugs into the country was difficult.

ROCHE

"We will continue to monitor the situation closely, assess the impact of the recently reintroduced economic sanctions and continue to work to ensure that patients in Iran can be provided with our innovative medicines, diagnostics and products," the Swiss drugs company said.

NESTLE

Nestle sees no direct fallout from renewed U.S. sanctions on Iran.

has its headquarters in Tehran and two factories: one in Qazvin that produces infant cereals and infant formula, and a bottled water factory in Polour.

The company has 818 employees and imports a limited range of from abroad, it said.

(Editing by Keith Weir)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, August 07 2018. 17:00 IST