Untitled Document
The Shi'ite alliance that won a slim majority in January's Iraqi election held
talks yesterday with Kurdish parties, with both sides saying a deal was close.
The new parliament is set to convene for the first time tomorrow.
The world's three biggest integrated oil companies
-- BP PLC, Exxon Mobil Corp. and the Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Cos. -- recently
struck cooperation or training deals with Iraq. France's Total SA regularly
invites Iraqi engineers to Paris for training.
"It's a way to maintain contact and get the oil
officials to know about them," said former Iraqi Oil Minister Issam Chalabi,
who fled Saddam Hussein's regime in 1991.
Speaking from Jordan, where he works as a consultant,
Mr. Chalabi said some 20 companies have offered Iraq's interim government training
for oil personnel, free geological studies or other technical assistance.
The oil powerhouses stayed on the sidelines as oil-services
companies such as Halliburton Co. were awarded billions of dollars in contracts
to renovate Iraqi pipelines and other infrastructure. The U.S.-led postwar administration
and the provisional government that followed lacked the democratic or legal
legitimacy to approve full-blown production deals, which typically guarantee
companies a share of oil extracted from fields they invest in.
Such long-term contracts may still have to wait until
after the framing of a new constitution and a second round of elections slated
for the end of this year, and perhaps even until the adoption of a new energy
law.
Iraq's crude is badly needed to fund the country's
reconstruction and to feed surging global demand. Iraq is exempt from OPEC's
quota system to aid its reconstruction.
With proven reserves of 112 billion barrels, but current
production of just 2 million per day, "Iraq has more oil fields that have
been discovered, but not developed, than any other country in the world,"
Mr. Chalabi said.
If rapid improvements are made to Iraq's damaged oil
infrastructure, Mr. Chalabi sees the potential to triple output to 6 million
barrels per day within about five years.
Yesterday, Saudi Arabia's support of a 2 percent increase
to OPEC's output target failed to calm oil markets, though it appeared to reflect
growing concern within the cartel about the effect high prices could have on
the global economy.
Even if the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
raised its daily production ceiling by 500,000 barrels, the impact on actual
supplies would be muted because member nations -- eager to maximize profits
with crude futures trading near $55 a barrel -- are already overshooting the
existing quota by about 700,000 barrels.
The price for light, sweet crude for April delivery
fell early yesterday, but then reversed course, rising 52 cents to $54.95 per
barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude rose 56 cents to settle
at $53.66 per barrel on London's International Petroleum Exchange.
The high cost of oil has led to surging prices for heating oil,
diesel, jet fuel and unleaded gasoline, which in the United States averages
$2 a gallon, or 26 cents higher than a year ago.
While they wait for Iraq's new government to form,
the world's oil leaders are lining up contracts.
Britain's BP agreed last month to analyze Iraqi
oil ministry data on the Rumailah oil field near the southern city of Basra,
in the zone patrolled by British forces. Such studies are vital when preparing
to start new drilling operations.
Exxon Mobil Corp. has an agreement covering technical
assistance, training and potential studies, while Royal Dutch/Shell won a contract
in January to carry out study work on Kirkuk, a major oil field in the north.
Total SA, which negotiated production contracts for
two Iraqi oil fields in the early 1990s but never signed them, argues that its
80 years of experience in Iraq could be crucial. Total was founded by a group
of investors who took over the French government's 24 percent stake in Iraq
Petroleum.
Former oil company geologist Ibrahim Mohammed, who
works as a London consultant in contact with Iraqi officials, says Baghdad oil
ministry staff expects the major U.S. companies to win the lion's share of contracts.
"Among people who are high up in the ministry
of oil and the national Iraqi oil company," the feeling is that "the
new government is going to be influenced by the United States," he said.
That perspective may have been a factor in OAO Lukoil's
decision in September to team up with ConocoPhillips Co. as it evaluates the
68.5 percent stake in the large West Qurna oil field that Lukoil negotiated
with Saddam's Iraq.
Lukoil is based in Russia, which also opposed the war.
The company is granting ConocoPhillips, based in Houston, a 17.5 percent stake
in the southern oil field -- giving the project a solid U.S. connection. ConocoPhillips,
which holds a 10 percent stake in Lukoil, declined to further discuss the deal
or comment on reports that post-Saddam administrators have canceled Lukoil's
production rights.
The Shi'ite alliance that won a slim majority in January's
Iraqi election held talks yesterday with Kurdish parties, with both sides saying
a deal was close. The new parliament is set to convene for the first time tomorrow.
The world's three biggest integrated oil companies
-- BP PLC, Exxon Mobil Corp. and the Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Cos. -- recently
struck cooperation or training deals with Iraq. France's Total SA regularly
invites Iraqi engineers to Paris for training.
"It's a way to maintain contact and get the oil
officials to know about them," said former Iraqi Oil Minister Issam Chalabi,
who fled Saddam Hussein's regime in 1991.
Speaking from Jordan, where he works as a consultant,
Mr. Chalabi said some 20 companies have offered Iraq's interim government training
for oil personnel, free geological studies or other technical assistance.
The oil powerhouses stayed on the sidelines as oil-services
companies such as Halliburton Co. were awarded billions of dollars in contracts
to renovate Iraqi pipelines and other infrastructure. The U.S.-led postwar administration
and the provisional government that followed lacked the democratic or legal
legitimacy to approve full-blown production deals, which typically guarantee
companies a share of oil extracted from fields they invest in.
Such long-term contracts may still have to wait until
after the framing of a new constitution and a second round of elections slated
for the end of this year, and perhaps even until the adoption of a new energy
law.
Iraq's crude is badly needed to fund the country's
reconstruction and to feed surging global demand. Iraq is exempt from OPEC's
quota system to aid its reconstruction.
With proven reserves of 112 billion barrels, but current
production of just 2 million per day, "Iraq has more oil fields that have
been discovered, but not developed, than any other country in the world,"
Mr. Chalabi said.
If rapid improvements are made to Iraq's damaged oil
infrastructure, Mr. Chalabi sees the potential to triple output to 6 million
barrels per day within about five years.
Yesterday, Saudi Arabia's support of a 2 percent increase
to OPEC's output target failed to calm oil markets, though it appeared to reflect
growing concern within the cartel about the effect high prices could have on
the global economy.
Even if the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
raised its daily production ceiling by 500,000 barrels, the impact on actual
supplies would be muted because member nations -- eager to maximize profits
with crude futures trading near $55 a barrel -- are already overshooting the
existing quota by about 700,000 barrels.
The price for light, sweet crude for April delivery
fell early yesterday, but then reversed course, rising 52 cents to $54.95 per
barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude rose 56 cents to settle
at $53.66 per barrel on London's International Petroleum Exchange.
The high cost of oil has led to surging prices for
heating oil, diesel, jet fuel and unleaded gasoline, which in the United States
averages $2 a gallon, or 26 cents higher than a year ago.
While they wait for Iraq's new government to form,
the world's oil leaders are lining up contracts.
Britain's BP agreed last month to analyze Iraqi oil
ministry data on the Rumailah oil field near the southern city of Basra, in
the zone patrolled by British forces. Such studies are vital when preparing
to start new drilling operations.
Exxon Mobil Corp. has an agreement covering technical
assistance, training and potential studies, while Royal Dutch/Shell won a contract
in January to carry out study work on Kirkuk, a major oil field in the north.
Total SA, which negotiated production contracts for
two Iraqi oil fields in the early 1990s but never signed them, argues that its
80 years of experience in Iraq could be crucial. Total was founded by a group
of investors who took over the French government's 24 percent stake in Iraq
Petroleum.
Former oil company geologist Ibrahim Mohammed, who
works as a London consultant in contact with Iraqi officials, says Baghdad oil
ministry staff expects the major U.S. companies to win the lion's share of contracts.
"Among people who are high up in the ministry
of oil and the national Iraqi oil company," the feeling is that "the
new government is going to be influenced by the United States," he said.
That perspective may have been a factor in OAO Lukoil's
decision in September to team up with ConocoPhillips Co. as it evaluates the
68.5 percent stake in the large West Qurna oil field that Lukoil negotiated
with Saddam's Iraq.
Lukoil is based in Russia, which also opposed the war.
The company is granting ConocoPhillips, based in Houston, a 17.5 percent stake
in the southern oil field -- giving the project a solid U.S. connection. ConocoPhillips,
which holds a 10 percent stake in Lukoil, declined to further discuss the deal
or comment on reports that post-Saddam administrators have canceled Lukoil's
production rights.