Saturday, October 28, 2006

IRAQ: CHINA & IRAQ REVISE SADDAM ERA OIL DEAL

Iraq, China to revive Saddam-era oil deal

BEIJING (AP)Baghdad seeks investment to revive industry China and Iraq are reviving a 1997 deal worth $1.2 billion signed by Beijing and Saddam Hussein’s government to develop an Iraqi oilfield, Baghdad’s oil minister said yesterday.

Officials will meet next month to renegotiate the agreement over the Al Ahdab field, said Iraqi Oil Minister Hussain Al Shahristani. He was wrapping up a three-nation tour to secure investment to revive his country’s oil industry.

“If agreement is reached very quickly then I expect them to start working right away,” Al Shahristani said at a news conference.

China is the world’s second-largest oil consumer and has been investing heavily in trying to secure access to foreign supplies.

State-owned China National Petroleum Corp. signed the Al Ahdab deal in the midst of UN sanctions that barred direct dealings with Iraq’s oil industry. Beijing was waiting for sanctions to end when the US invasion in 2003 overthrew Saddam’s government.

The new Baghdad government courted Beijing because Chinese producers have been willing to invest in Angola, Sudan and other countries that are considered too dangerous or politically isolated.

All other energy contracts signed by foreign producers during the Saddam era also must be renegotiated after Iraqi lawmakers enact a new oil and gas law, which is likely to happen this year.

Beijing had been thought to be out of the running for major contracts in postwar Iraq, with the best deals going to the United States and its allies. But the upsurge in violence there has made the country less attractive to Western producers.

Al Shahristani said Al Ahdab would be among the first fields offered to foreign bidders, which will need to show technical and financial capability and a proven record in producing oil.

Iraq will need up to $20 billion in investment to develop its oil infrastructure, the minister said. Al Shahristani met with Chinese energy officials and executives of the country’s four biggest oil companies – CNPC, China Petroleum and Chemical Corp., China National Offshore Oil Corp. and Sinochem Corp.

He said questions about security in Iraq didn’t come up, because the fields that interest Chinese producers are in the south, where violence is minimal.

It appears that it is the Chinese that are going to get the oil and not the Americans...I wonder what all the Leftist freaks are going to say about this, especially when they claim that the U.S. went into Iraq to get their oil...


Pertinent Links:

1) Iraq, China to revive Saddam-era oil deal

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