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Firms line up for Iraqi oil, but outlook murky

An oil refinery in the once restive and violent city of Haditha is working once again.

The reopening ceremony was attended by Oil Minister Hussein Shahristani who thanked the people of the Province of Anbar, of which Haditha is a major town, for their efforts to restore relative stability.

The refinery was shut due to mounting violence which had turned the whole of Anbar Province into a war zone, Azzaman reports.

Ramco Energy notes the recent share price movements and articles in the media surrounding its associate company Mesopotamia Petroleum Company Limited, in which Ramco holds a 32.66% interest, concerning the establishment of a joint venture with the Government-owned Iraqi Drilling Company.

Ramco confirms that MPC has been in talks concerning the establishment of a joint venture to provide oil services with IDC, under a mandate from the Iraq Ministry of Oil, for some considerable time and these have reached an advanced stage, OilVoice said.

UK’s Midmar Energy confirmed the deal, saying that its associate company, Mesopotamia Petroleum Company (MPC), is in the advanced stages of discussion regarding a joint venture with state-owned Iraq Drilling Company (IDC).

Midmar formed MPC in 2005, with its partners, as an oil and gas company established for the specific purpose of undertaking operations in Iraq. Midmar holds a 32.67% interest, Upstreamonline reported.

“We anticipate the formal ratification of our agreements in order to progress our work in Iraq,” said Midmar boss Thomas Redman in a statement.

A project to supply, process, and transport natural gas to Kurdistan Region for much-needed and more affordable electricity is rapidly progressing.

The United Arab Emirates’ Dana Gas and Crescent Petroleum are to start producing natural gas in the Iraqi Kurdistan Region as of next month, and they promise to put an end to the devastating power and fuel crisis.

The head of Dana Gas, Hamid Dhia Jaafar, announced that his company and Crescent Petroleum will start producing natural gas in Kurdistan Region on August 1, 2008, Aiyob Mawloodi with The Kurdish Globe reports.

Occidental Petroleum CEO Ray Irani said Iraq’s larger oil fields will likely draw formal participation from a consortium of large Western oil producers later this year, as the war-torn country moves to ramp up its economy. “There are some very large fields in Iraq which are going to become available,” Irani told Wall Street analysts on a conference call. “The huge ones will be run by…the oil majors and companies our size. No one company is going to get a field of 20 billion barrels or more, period.” Occidental also sees an opportunity to run smaller fields in Iraq on its own, Steve Gelsi for MarketWatch says.

At a time of high oil prices and supply shortages, the dispute over Iraq’s oil reserves, which could produce an additional 1.5m barrels a day with minimum investment, demands urgent resolution.

Iraq’s oilfields require immediate and expert maintenance, and the Iraqi people need the funds the oil can command on the global market. But negotiations on a draft national oil law are hopelessly stalled and controversy has erupted over proposed contracts with foreign oil companies. Iraq needs international support to negotiate fair and sustainable deals, Yahia Said writes for The Financial Times.

Iraq may be seeking to accelerate crude production, says Tamsin Carlisle for The National, but the outlook for concluding any agreements to develop the country’s oil and gas resources remains exceptionally murky.

Earlier this month, the oil ministry of Iraq asked international oil companies to revise proposals for short-term deals to raise output from Iraq’s six biggest producing oil fields, shortening the contracts to between 12 and 18 months from the two years previously stipulated. But there is no guarantee that Western oil companies involved in the negotiations will be amenable to the new terms.

Industry analysts and executives are skeptical a planned opening of the war-torn country’s oil industry to foreign investment will bring big profits for the Western Oil Majors, or boost output as much as hoped, Tom Bergin writes for Reuters.

While many have lined up to register to bid for Iraqi oil deals, actual bidders may be thinner on the ground and deals may take longer to conclude than the government plans.

If the invasion was about oil, let the record show it has been more botched than even its toughest critics claim,” Raad Alkadiri, Senior Director in the Markets and Country Strategies practice, at industry consultants PFC Energy said in a note to clients.

Responding to a request by four Senate Democrats, the State Department’s inspector general

has announced an inquiry into the department’s policy on western oil company contracts in Iraq.

“I have initiated a review of the responses provided to Congress recently on issues surrounding oil contracts, oil field development and U.S. policy in Iraq,” Acting State Department Inspector General Harold Geisel wrote in a June 22 letter obtained by CongressDaily.

The letter to Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., and Sens. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., John Kerry, D-Mass., and Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., refers to material State gave the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee for its investigation into a deal involving Texas-based Hunt Oil Co., as well as other potential oil contracts.

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Kirkuk oil exports resume following debt payment to Turkey

Turkey restarted loadings of halted Iraqi oil exports on Tuesday after Iraq paid $50 million of a total $100 million debt, a senior source from the state pipeline company Botas told Reuters.

An Iraq oil ministry official had said earlier Iraq’s Kirkuk oil exports to Turkey had been halted after a Turkish court ordered the stoppage pending settlement of the claim.

Speigal Online said Iraq is attempting to revive its oil business. And in Iraq, The Association of German Chambers of Industry and Commerce also sees opportunity for German companies. “There is also demand for German companies in the area of technologies for oil exploration,” said commerce chief Axel Nitschke, adding that oil could provide Iraq with a fresh start economically.

Iraq has asked international oil companies to revise proposals for technical service contracts worth about $3 billion that aim to boost the country’s oil output by about a quarter.

The revisions could delay the signing of the six contracts — worth around $500 million each — until August or September, Simon Webb and Mohammed Abbas report for Reuters.

Iraq is sitting on billions of barrels of oil, but it doesn’t have the money or expertise to pull it out of the ground, so it’s looking to European energy firms to help get the job done.

In the long term, Iraq plans to partner with foreign companies to develop new wells, says Marketplaces’ Dan Grech.

The oil industry is cautious about Iraq’s decision to offer foreign companies long-term contracts to develop its largest producing fields, with any windfalls seen as distant and likely to go to a select few firms.

Earlier this month, Iraq said it would offer development contracts aimed at boosting output at six fields by a combined 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd).

The plan, says Tom Bergin with Reuters, is aimed at helping the country lift output to 4.5 million bpd by 2013 from about 2.3 million bpd now.

But Iraq’s decision to pay companies a fee for extracting the oil, rather than sell them an interest in fields, dashed hopes of near-term windfalls and may delay big rises in crude production.

Will the war in Iraq give us the Tiger? Military scientists at Edgewood Chemical Biological Center at Aberdeen Proving Ground hope so. The machine - its full name is the Tactical Garbage to Energy Refinery - combines a chute, an engine, chemical tanks and other components, giving it the appearance of a lunar rover. It’s designed to turn food and waste into fuel. If it works, it could save scores of American and Iraqi lives, says Josh Mitchell with The Baltimore Sun.

Refinery back up in Iraq’s Anbar province, yet oil is “finished”

“Iraq has many underexplored and underexploited fields, but who can tell what’s going to be happening with Iraq?” said Paul Sullivan, economics professor at the National Defence University in Washington, DC.

The remark was made in a recent discussion on energy, security and development at the Centre for Strategic Studies at the University of Jordan.

Sullivan, who is also an adjunct professor of security studies at Georgetown University, said most of the major oil finds over the last century were made in the 1960s and 1970s, adding that any further discoveries will not come easy.

“Oil is finished, it’s over with, it’s done,” he said.

An oil refinery in Iraq’s western desert has resumed production, as part of an outreach to an area once controlled by Sunni insurgents, Sinan Salaheddin writes for the Associated Press.

The refinery, located near the Syrian border in the once-violent Anbar Province, was closed in 2005 due to deteriorating security. Its rehabilitation is part of efforts by the Shiite-led government to boost services and win loyalties in the nation’s Sunni heartland.

The refinery is expected to generate local jobs and meet needs for fuel and other petroleum products in the region, which was once the main stronghold of al-Qaida in Iraq.

As head of one of the country’s three state-owned oil companies, Sheikh Manaa Abdullah Alobaydi is one of the most important people in northern Iraq. He is such a major figure that the government won’t let him and Hunar Najeeb Hassan, director general of Northern Gas Co., travel outside Iraq at the same time.

Yet unlike so many powerful men in Iraq, the two company leaders studiously avoid politics, which both consider the bane of their existence. While lawmakers in Baghdad debate how to divvy up Iraq’s mineral wealth, the country depends upon apolitical oil and natural gas experts like them to keep that wealth flowing, reports James Warden with Stars and Stripes.

The European Union is negotiating an energy pact with the Iraqi government, part of the bloc’s efforts to reduce dependence on Russian oil and gas. Iraq has the world’s third largest proven reserves of oil and in late June opened key producing fields to foreign investment, Tim Cocks with Reuters says.

Republican Senate candidate Bob Schaffer said that oil leases he helped obtain for a former employer in the Kurdish region of Iraq didn’t undermine that country’s stability, and he strongly defended them as a boon to the Kurds as well as U.S. interests in the region, Michael Riley with The Denver Post reports.

In his most extensive comments yet on the subject, the former three-term congressman also clarified what he knew of U.S. State Department warnings that such leases were counterproductive to the American goal of a strong central government in Iraq.

The election plans remain snared in one of Iraq’s thorniest political dilemmas: the future of the oil-rich northern region of Kirkuk.

Iraq’s Kurds, who control a semi-autonomous region in the north, have held up parliament passage of a law to allocate funds and set guidelines for the provincial elections, writes Brian Murphy with the Associated Press.

Iraq limits no-bid oil contracts to one year

The Iraqi government is planning to limit no-bid contracts being negotiated with several major oil companies to one year to avoid overlap with longer-term deals expected to be signed next June, the Associated Press reported.

The no-bid contracts have sparked controversy because several major Western firms have been involved in the discussions. There are concerns that granting such contracts to Western oil companies could feed perceptions that U.S.-led forces toppled Saddam Hussein to grab the country’s natural resources.

Some, the AP said later in a follow-up report, believe the no-bid deals in Iraq could give Western firms an advantage in the larger bidding process, which Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani said last month would include 35 foreign companies. The firms he named included seven from the U.S., three from Britain and others from countries like Russia and China.

Colorado Senatorial candidate Bob Schaffer acknowledged that he knowingly arranged an oil deal in the Kurdish region of Iraq that was counterproductive to American interests in the region. He argued that the deal was allowed under Iraq’s federal system, and so he felt comfortable pursuing it, writes Sam Stein for The Huffington Post.

For years, “oil” and “Iraq” couldn’t make it into the same sentence in mainstream coverage of the invasion and occupation of that country. Recently, that’s begun to change, but “oil” and “the Pentagon” still seldom make the news together.

Last year, for instance, according to Department of Defense (DoD) documents, the Pentagon paid more than $70 million to Hunt Refining, an oil company whose corporate affiliate, Hunt Oil, undermined U.S. policy in Iraq. Not that anyone would know it. While the hunt for oil in Iraq is now being increasingly well covered in the mainstream, the Pentagon’s hunt for oil remains a subject missing in action, writes Nick Turse for MotherJones.

Four Democratic senators, including Sen. Carl Levin, called on the State Department’s inspector general to investigate whether agency employees encouraged lucrative oil deals between Iraq and several Western companies.

Any behind-the-scenes meddling would have violated administration policy, which was to discourage the business dealings until Baghdad passed a law that would fairly divide the nation’s oil resources among the various provinces, says Anne Flaherty with The Associated Press.

German oil and gas company Wintershall, part of chemicals group BASF has a “big chance” of winning oil exploration rights in Iraq, German Economy Minister Michael Glos Reuters reports.

“The German crude oil firm Wintershall has, for example, a big chance of getting exploration rights for crude oil in Iraq,” Glos told daily Die Welt. “I hope that it and other firms get more involved in extracting crude oil in Iraq.” “But the German construction and construction materials industry also have a big chance,” added Glos, who at the weekend became the first German cabinet minister to visit Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion of the country in 2003.

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Iraqi oil contracts hold key to peace?

Dr. Mahmoud Othman, a lawmaker with the Kurdistan block in the federal Parliament in Baghdad, has denied statements attributed to him by the press saying that the Kurdistan Regional Government’s oil contracts are illegal, the KRG said in a press statement.

Dr. Othman has requested the Kurdistan Regional Government issue a statement on his behalf clarifying that he was misquoted in his comments on proposed Federal Oil Ministry contracts and existing KRG contracts.

Iraqi Finance Minister Bayan Jabr Solagh said that Iraq’s booming oil wealth holds the key to peace and urged foreign investors to take part in huge projects planned by his war-ravaged country.

With state revenues quadrupled since the US-led invasion of 2003 and amid soaring world oil prices, “from my point of view, money is key to peace, it is the main key,” Solagh said in an interview with AFP.

Finally, after a long five years-plus, there was proof that the occupation of Iraq really did have something or other to do with oil, said Nick Turse with Salon.

Every time we put fuel in our cars, we are probably paying for the war in Iraq - a disturbing thought. The fact is, oil output from Iraq fell to one-third of what it was before the invasion and one-fifth of what it could now be. Fortunately, some Iraqi oil wells are currently being brought back into more regular production and there is talk of the discovery of a new field in the western desert of Iraq, writes Michael Casey for The Irish Times.

The al-Basaer newspaper of The Association of Muslim Scholars said in its Tuesday editorial that efforts by Iraq and the United States are focused on reaching a long-term strategic agreement. The agreement is to be signed between Washington and what the newspaper calls “the Iraqi government,” which al-Basaer says presumably is supposed to represent the will of the Iraqi people.

It said the United States would achieve victory with the passage of the agreement, while the Iraqi government would be a toy to place Iraqi oil legitimately in U.S. hands for decades.

A visit by the prime minister to Iraq last week paved the ground for a new era between Ankara and Baghdad, setting the ground for immense energy cooperation between the two countries as various agreements were reached, notes the Turkish Daily News.

A landmark consensus to secure Turkey’s rights to Iraqi oil, which grants authorization to the Turkish Petroleum Corporation, or TPAO, for oil exploration, drilling and marketing, was reached in a written document signed by the Iraqi oil minister at the last minute.

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Iraqi oil sparks political sour note

Mr. President, said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., I am deeply concerned by the apparent lack of a clear and consistent U.S. policy on the entering into of oil deals in Iraq in the absence of Iraqi national hydrocarbon legislation. Unfortunately, that legislation, which would ensure equitable distribution of oil revenues among the Iraqi people and enable increased oil production and long-term foreign investment, remains stalled in the Iraqi Council of Representatives

In just a matter of weeks, much of the momentum behind Iraq’s push to revamp its oil industry has been weakened by political infighting, notes the Middle East Business Intelligence. Just when it seemed that real progress had been made through the signing of long-awaited technical service contracts with international oil companies (IOCs), rifts have again appeared.

Turkey and Iraq discussed joint energy projects in oil drilling and the transfer of oil and natural gas to Europe via new pipelines during Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s scheduled one-day visit to Baghdad, said Begum Gursoy for TurkishPress.com.

Alongside security and political matters, energy was one of the top issues during the meetings. After intense talks, Iraq allowed Turkish companies to receive oil drilling permits. Erdogan pressed Iraqi officials to concede privileges to Turkish companies. Turkish and Iraqi companies could also form consortiums to execute the projects.

Oil privatization is a red line for the unions in occupied Iraq, and a red rag to the workers on the front line, who have vowed to resist any privatisation of what they see as national assets, writes Ewa Jasiewicz for The Guardian.

The Bush administration’s top benchmark, the Iraqi oil law, remains off the statute books, five deadlines and two years since its first draft. Yet the Iraqi cabinet keeps threatening to pass it, despite the lack of a parliamentary majority backing it.

Major western oil companies are on the cusp of potentially determinative transitional agreements with the Iraqi oil ministry as the country seeks to bolster development and revenues. However, significant challenges loom, says Dominic Moran in Tel Aviv for ISN Security Watch.

Two foreign policy advisers ripped GOP candidate for U.S. Senator from Colorado Bob Schaffer Friday, saying an oil deal his company negotiated in a region of Iraq jeopardized the safety of American troops, said Lynn Bartels with the Rocky Mountain News.

Schaffer researched the country and political situation when he visited in 2006 while working as a senior vice president for Denver-based Aspect Energy. The oil deal was reached the following year.

“I think there is a serious question about who Bob Schaffer is,” said Rand Beers, former senior member of National Security Council staff who worked for every president since Ronald Reagan.

In a city with constant electricity shortages but no lack of sunshine, the new buzz is solar energy, says Alexandra Zavis with the Los Angeles Times.

Teams of engineers have appeared along major Baghdad roadways, bolting panels and bulbs to rows of towering steel poles to make solar-powered streetlights.

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Iraqi oil ministry schedules major energy conference

Reuters reported that the Iraqi Oil Ministry said the country will hold a major oil and gas conference in October to allow foreign oil firms to get a better understanding of the country’s energy potential.

The Oct 17-19 energy conference and exhibition will be the first event of its type in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. More than 50 international oil companies would take part, Oil Ministry spokesman Asim Jihad told a news conference.

“It will be a great chance for the Oil Ministry to meet global oil companies and discuss their potential role in developing Iraq’s oil sector,” Jihad said.

Iraq’s Oil Ministry said that it is close to signing contracts to build two new oil refineries in southern Iraq, the Associated Press said.

The ministry is expected to sign one contract for a 300,000 barrel-per-day refinery in Nasiriyah province by the end of July or early August, a senior oil official said.

The official said the ministry was studying proposals presented by international companies to build another 150,000-barrel-per-day refinery in Karbala. The official, who declined to name the companies, spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to make statements.

Most analysts believe that the autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan region possesses far more oil than current forecasts hold — possibly as much as 45 billion barrels, which would put the Iraqi north alone on the level of petro-titans like Nigeria. Kurdistan’s “prospectivity is beyond doubt,” Micael Gulbenkian of the Canadian Heritage Oil Company, which does business in Kurdistan, said in a 2006 interview.

The trouble lies in getting the oil out of the ground, writes Spencer Ackerman with The Washington Independent.

Reuters said that Iraq’s fledgling navy of battered patrol boats is bulking up for a greater role in protecting the country’s economic heart, its offshore oil terminals.

Putting on muscle to protect the two terminals that account for 90 per cent of Iraq’s revenues, the tiny navy is aiming to boost manpower by about a third to 2,500 in two years and greatly expand its fleet, now centred on five Chinese-made Predator patrol boats.

More control over its wreck-ridden waters at the head of the Gulf is another sign of Iraq’s determination to secure its oil infrastructure and reserves, the world’s third largest.

The oil deals the Kurdish regional government and the central government in Baghdad are signing are illegal, according to a top Kurdish politician and legislator.

Mahmoud Othman, the head of the powerful Kurdish bloc in Iraqi parliament, described the signing of these deals as “a premature and out-of-lace move” in the absence of a national law organizing the exploitation of the country’s oil riches.

Othman is the first senior Kurdish officials to criticize the oil development deals the Kurdish regional government has signed, the Iraqi daily, Azzaman reported.

The Canadians are squeezing oil from sand. The Brazilians want to nurse it up through miles of seawater, sandstone and salt. But here in the far north of Iraq, oil is literally bubbling to the surface.

Oil executives lament that the age of “easy oil” is over. It isn’t over here. For companies that have stumbled into this corner of Iraq known as Kurdistan, it’s an era that has just begun, writes Neil King Jr. for The Wall Street Journal.

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Chomsky speaks on Iraqi oil

The deal just taking shape between Iraq’s Oil Ministry and four Western oil companies raises critical questions about the nature of the US invasion and occupation of Iraq — questions that should certainly be addressed by presidential candidates and seriously discussed in the United States, and of course in occupied Iraq, where it appears that the population has little if any role in determining the future of their country, writes Noam Chomsky.

The Jerusalem-based intelligence-reporting agency, DEBKAfile said oil prices suddenly slumped Tuesday, July 8 under the impact of the secret American-Iranian talks embarked on last month to solve burning issues by diplomatic engagement.

These talks between the US and Iranian delegations, representing President George W. Bush and Iranian supreme ruler Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, have yielded ad hoc understandings on controversial issues. One is an agreement not to allow the price of oil to rocket past $150 the barrel.

The former Iraqi oil minister Ibrahim Bahr Al-Aloom declared that the infrastructure of the Iraqi oil sector is the worst ever among the oil producing countries and is not commensurate with the potential of Iraq’s oil.

He added: “we have not been able so far to begin the process of reconstruction in the required form, what makes us very cautious and concerned about the prospects for future development of the foundations would not allow the process capable of maintaining and developing the sector.” He called for a “sound basis of policies that oil be able to develop the infrastructure sector, to ensure the utilization of its revenue in the reconstruction of the country,” Iraq Directory reported.

Reuters reports that the Iraqi army has formed a new battalion that aims to cut the time taken to repair damaged oil pipelines by half.

Iraq’s hundreds of miles of oil pipelines have often come under attack by insurgents seeking to disrupt the flow of Iraq’s main export, and also by criminals siphoning off oil for sale on the black market.

The Engineer Infrastructure Battalion comprises engineers who will go to damaged pipelines, which carry oil to refineries for domestic use, to neighboring Turkey and also to the port city of Basra for export.

Even though Iraqis, enjoying a degree of civil safety these days after years of terror, still endure long gas lines in a country brimming with oil, hope is on the horizon. The government is opening six major oil fields and two natural gas fields to development by foreign firms. There’s talk of an achievable 60 percent increase from current production levels. That would mean more oil for the world and more revenue for the government, already set to take in $70 billion this year.

Americans can cheer that. A richer Iraq can be expected to pay more of its own way as it rebuilds. More oil on the world market — maybe even the prospect of it — helps to lower prices, The News & Observer of North Carolina writes.

The Gulf Times says Crescent Petroleum, the United Arab Emirates-based oil and gas company, along with its affiliate Dana Gas, will start producing gas from northern Iraq’s Kurdistan fields in early August, a company executive has said.

“We will start producing 75mn cu ft of gas a day within weeks and will increase to 150mn cubic feet gradually, reaching 300mn cu ft by early 2009,” Crescent’s executive director Majid Jafar said.

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Iraqi oil … on both sides of the pond

Here’s a thought experiment from The Wall Street Journal: Assume that Iraq’s democratic government declared it was nationalizing its oil industry, a la Venezuela or Saudi Arabia, while excluding American companies from the country. How do you think U.S. politicians would react? With angry cries of “ingratitude” and “this is what Americans died for”?

Of course they would, led no doubt by that critic for all reasons, Senator Chuck Schumer of New York. So it is passing strange that Mr. Schumer and other Senators are now assailing Iraq precisely because it is opening up to foreign oil companies, especially to U.S. majors like Exxon Mobil and Chevron.

Democratic lawmakers say the Bush administration knew more than it let on about a controversial oil deal between Dallas-based Hunt Oil and Kurdish regional officials in Iraq, a move that sparked condemnation for complicating the country’s ability to enact a nationwide oil law.

Hunt Oil, whose chief executive Ray L. Hunt is a member of the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and a major contributor to Bush’s campaigns, signed a petroleum production-sharing contract in September with the Kurdistan Regional Government, the first since the semi-autonomous government unanimously adopted its own petroleum legislation in August, Derek Kravitz writes for The Washington Post.

Five years after the American occupation of Iraq, oil policy has finally started attracting significant attention from Iraqi policymakers. In fact, 2008 can be considered the year of big oil decisions at this stage of Iraq’s history. Currently, the ministry of oil is negotiating two types of contracts with international corporations, one for technical services and the other for development and production. The ministry needs the approval of the council of ministers for the former type whereas the latter needs to be presented in parliament once the oil law has been enacted. Since the ministry has received no approvals for either type, any talk about agreements with international corporations remains premature says Walid Khadduri for Al-Hayat.

The Production Sharing Agreements in Iraq resemble the kinds of arrangements that used to prevail in the Middle East when a handful of U.S. and British oil companies controlled the world’s oil through their cartel known as the Seven Sisters, Linda McQuaig writes for The Toronto Star.

Ironically, four of the companies returning to Iraq – ExxonMobil, BP, Shell and Total – were the original partners in a consortium called the Iraq Petroleum Company that for decades held the exclusive rights to develop oil in Iraq. They were kicked out in 1972 when Saddam nationalized the country’s oil industry.

Agence France Presse reports that Iraq said it would be guided by the principle of competition when awarding contracts to global energy companies hoping to cash in on the country’s vast oil and gas fields.

On Monday the oil ministry threw open six oilfields and two gas fields for international bidding by 41 companies, the contracts for which are expected to be signed in June next year.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said Baghdad would award the service contracts only on the basis of competition.

“There is no intention of signing oil deals outside the law. The principle of competition will be applied. There is no preference to any company,” he said.

Power Machines, Russia’s biggest energy machinery producer, announced that it would build a 26.8-megawatt hydrostation in northern Iraq by July 2010, raising hopes for other Russian firms looking to re-enter the country, The Moscow Times reports.

Financial terms for the deal would not be disclosed, Power Machines said in a statement, although an analyst estimated that it was worth $16 million to $18 million. Originally signed in 2001, the contract was suspended shortly after U.S.-led troops toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

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Iraq oil deals raise questions

Bush administration officials knew that a Texas oil company with close ties to President Bush was planning to sign an oil deal with the regional Kurdistan government that ran counter to American policy and undercut Iraq’s central government, a Congressional committee has

The conclusions were based on e-mail messages and other documents that the committee released Wednesday, James Glanz and Richard A. Oppel Jr. write for The New York Times.

Steven Mufson with the Washington Post writes that last fall the State Department said that it had tried to dissuade Hunt Oil from signing a contract with Kurdish regional authorities but that the company had proceeded “regardless of our advice.” Although Hunt Oil’s chief executive has been a major fundraiser for President Bush, the president said he knew nothing about the deal.

Yesterday, however, Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, released documents and e-mails showing that for nearly four months, State and Commerce department officials knew about Hunt Oil’s negotiations with the KRG and had told company officials that there were no objections.

In Iraq this week, the giant oil fields were opened to foreign bidders. U.S. conglomerates such as Exxon Mobil are about to sign no-bid contracts to move in. Big Oil, already brimming with profits, will have a fine Fourth of July.

Azzaman notes that the central government and the Kurdish authorities have signed a secret deal under which the Kurds are to extend their political autonomy over their oil riches, a senior member of parliament said.

Jaber Khaleefa of the parliament’s Oil and Gas Committee said the secret deal has allowed both sides to proceed ahead with contracts with foreign firms despite the lack of constitutional backing.

Despite having the world’s third-largest proven oil reserves, Iraq’s production of 2.5 million barrels a day is only the 12th biggest. And although production has recently recovered to the levels seen before the 2003 US-led invasion, it is still about 1 million barrels a day below its peak in the late 1970s, the BBC’s Richard Thompson writes.

Total, one of the largest petroleum company in Europe, is “on the verge” of signing an oil-services contract with Iraq as companies from the U.S. and Europe seek to access supplies and increase production there, Anthony DiPaola writes for Bloomberg News

The French company will sign the contract as a partner of Chevron, the Total chief executive, Christophe de Margerie said Tuesday during a news conference at the World Petroleum Congress in Madrid.

Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani has told lawmakers that short-term technical support contracts with oil majors worth around $3 billion may not get signed, two parliamentarians said.

The lawmakers, the two top officials on parliament’s oil and gas committee, told Reuters late on Wednesday that Shahristani was unhappy with delays in getting the contracts agreed. One sticking point was payment terms, Ahmed Rasheed reported for Reuters.

The new Baghdad deals will trigger more wrangling over the real motivation for the Iraq invasion. There was a time when it was mainly just conspiracy theorists and other assorted weedy types who claimed the aggression was chiefly about oil. But along came Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board, who wrote last year in his book The Age of Turbulence, “I am saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: The Iraq war is largely about oil.” This week’s entry of Big Oil in Iraq will only buttress this view, says the Globe and Mail’s Lawrence Martin.

The Iraqi parliament’s oil and gas committee must have the right to scrutinise any long-term oil contracts signed with foreign firms or it will try to block the deals, the committee’s head said on Tuesday.

The comments by Ali Hussain Balou came a day after the Oil Ministry opened Iraq’s giant oilfields to bids for long-term contracts by foreigners for the first time in decades, Ahmed Rasheed reported for Reuters

Balou also demanded an explanation from Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani on plans to offer a series of short-term technical support contracts worth $500 million each to a handful of Western oil majors without competitive bidding.

“The parliamentary oil and gas committee … should have access to every detail on all the contracts, otherwise we will block them in parliament,” Balou, a Kurd, told Reuters.

Perhaps Sen. Schumer would approve if the Saudis were to agree to pump the Iraq oil?A few weeks ago New York Sen. Schumer and aspiring global Petroleum Czar was threatening to block arms sales to Saudi Arabia if it didn’t produce more oil. Now, he’s outraged that the Iraqi government may give modest no-bid service contracts to Western oil companies as a first step toward more fully exploiting the country’s vast oil reserves, the editors of the National Review said.

Mohammed Abbas for ArabianBusiness.com writes that Iraq’s finance ministry wants to raise its 2008 budget by 44 percent to a record $70 billion, cashing in on record oil prices to rebuild shattered infrastructure, the government’s spokesman said on Wednesday.

The ministry’s submission of a supplementary budget of $21 billion - on top of February’s 2008 budget of $48 billion - comes as prices for Iraq’s main export oil hits record highs.

“This enhanced budget that results from the stability in Iraq’s oil exports… will have tangible positive effects on the provision of basic services in the country,” government spokesman Ali Al-Dabbagh said in a statement.

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