IRAQ:
Gas Pumps Buried in
Mountain of Unpaid Debts
Pratap Chatterjee
OAKLAND, California, Feb 16 (IPS) - Contract mismanagement and possible
corruption in the Iraqi government are fueling a crisis over international
gasoline delivery into Iraq.
Citing a mountain of unpaid bills, the governments of Turkey and Saudi Arabia
have shut off gasoline exports to Iraq. With its options dwindling and
beleaguered Iraqis demanding fuel, Baghdad has begun to negotiate with its
former arch-rival, Iran.
Government officials in Baghdad and Washington claim that the cause of the
gasoline shortage is "insurgent" or "terrorist" activity, but many say that the
problem is often corruption and common criminal activity.
Iraq's gasoline comes from two sources: domestic refineries process a limited
amount of the nation's crude into gasoline, but it is imports from neighbouring
nations that run most of the country's vehicles and generators. Saudi Arabia and
Turkey supply more than half of Iraq's domestic needs.
In August 2005, after Iraq's debt rose into the millions, Saudi Arabia turned
off the spigot. On Jan. 21, after Baghdad's unpaid bill topped a billion
dollars, Turkey stopped loading gasoline for Iraq.
The supply from Kuwait is also drying up. Lloyd-Owen International (LOI), a
Florida-based company, had arranged to truck in 1.3 billion litres of gasoline
from the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation to gas stations throughout Iraq over the
last 19 months.
On Feb. 2, Alan Waller, chief executive officer of LOI, temporarily stopped
supplies to Baghdad because of payment arrears. By last weekend, Iraq's imports
had plummeted from the previous norm of 12 million litres a day to three
million.
In a strongly worded letter he emailed last weekend to Thomas Delare, the
economic counselor at the United States embassy in Baghdad, Waller wrote: "The
government of Iraq is unwilling to pay what is correctly owed us or even meet to
discuss that and we cannot get any assistance from the U.S. administration in
order to help. As such, I can only step back and pull all my international staff
out of Iraq for their own safety and let the Iraqi people deal with the
situation in their own way."
Waller claimed that the government of Iraq has illegally canceled his contract
and is now negotiating with a different U.S. company, Global Network
Transportation, to deliver fuel in Iraq.
In late 2003, local suppliers were charging 96 cents a gallon to purchase and
deliver gasoline while Halliburton of Houston, Texas, charged an average of 2.65
dollars a gallon for the same service via its sub-contractor, Altanmia
Commercial Marketing Company. In spring 2004, shortly before the country was
handed over to the Iraqis, the U.S. military said the contract was too expensive
and canceled it.
The new Iraqi government then awarded an identical gasoline supply contract to
LOI and its partners, Geotech Environmental Services of Kuwait. LOI charged
one-seventh of Altanmia's price for delivery, a mere 18 cents a gallon compared
to the premium that the military had paid Halliburton previously.
Waller says LOI has delivered 37,000 tankers of gasoline throughout Iraq over
the last 19 months "without losing a single tanker to insurgent or terrorist
activity", unlike Halliburton's convoys which were frequently attacked. LOI/Geotech's
contract was supposed to run through June 2006, but is now in doubt.
To make matters worse, sabotage and cold weather have plunged Iraq's own oil
production and refining into crisis. Despite sitting on the world's third
biggest oil reserves, Iraq's exports slumped from a high of 2.1 million barrels
per day just 1.1 million barrels a day in December, their lowest level since the
war in 2003.
This slide, together with the delivery crisis, has led to major gasoline
shortages in Baghdad, where vulnerable drivers wait in quarter-mile-long lines.
The capital's erratic electricity has exacerbated the problem by forcing people
to run gas-hungry generators to keep the lights on and the air conditioning
running in their houses and stores.
No matter what else was wrong under Saddam Hussein, gasoline and kerosene
cooking oil were always available and cheap. The U.S. government maintained this
policy of supplying gasoline at just 20 cents a gallon, well below its actual
cost.
But the cash-strapped Iraqi government has recently changed that policy,
tripling gasoline prices at the end of the year, under pressure from the
International Monetary Fund. This price hike has become a major source of anger
but it bought Baghdad a 685-million-dollar IMF loan on Dec. 24, 2005.
Contention over the price increase caused a split in the ministry of oil, which
is supposed to oversee production and distribution. Iraq's oil minister Ibrahim
Bahr al-Ulum was first asked to leave his post in late December 2005, when he
protested the fuel price increase.
Although al-Ulum returned to his job in early January, a week ago the government
again asked him to resign.
Blame for the crisis spreads as easily as oil in a puddle. Government officials
in Baghdad and Washington charge that corrupt mid- and low-level officials are
collaborating with "insurgents" who have created chaos by attacking domestic
fuel convoys and pipelines and siphoning off supplies to sell at a profit.
But Waller argues that while "terrorist" groups are responsible for many violent
attacks, another major problem is criminal gangs and poor people trying to
survive.
"This country is like Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union," he said.
"Members of the U.S. military have said on CNN that long fuel lines in Baghdad
are due to insurgent activity -- not true. (The real problem) is very simple.
Lack of payment is forcing Iraq into chaos and corruption."
Indeed al-Ulum, the former oil minister, told the London-based newspaper Al
Hayat late last year that "oil and fuel smuggling networks have grown into a
dangerous mafia threatening the lives of those in charge of fighting
corruption", according to a BBC translation.
With gasoline supplies dwindling and anger growing, Washington and Baghdad are
scrambling to return Iraq to what passes for normal. Iraqi oil ministry
officials say that the payments will resume soon. "The oil ministry is working
with the government in order to speed up the payment process. There is no
problem. It is just a matter of time and the money will be paid," ministry
spokesman Asim Jihad told reporters.
U.S. embassy officials are more pessimistic. "I am scheduled to have some high
level meetings in the next several days with Ministry of Oil officials," Delare
wrote to Waller on Feb. 6. "I wish I had encouraging news for you, but despite
our efforts to resolve the payments arrears problems, we have had no success so
far," the embassy economic counselor in Baghdad added.
But officials in Baghdad do have another fallback plan -- their one-time arch
enemy, Iran, which is close to the current Iraqi government. Indeed this subject
was discussed as far back as last July when Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari
visited Tehran, a prospect that mystifies Waller given the ongoing political
disputes between Iran and the U.S. government.
"Due to payment issues and the fuel problems the U.S. backed government of Iraq
is now seeking to purchase and import fuel from Iran, and Najaf is the new
Iranian capital of Iraq," Waller wrote on Feb. 4 to the U.S. embassy in Baghdad.
*Pratap Chatterjee is the managing editor of CorpWatch. (END/2006)
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