Who controls Iraq's oil?
by Faisal Islam
21-03-08
We have had exclusive access to the first Iraqi oilfield in decades to be
opened by a foreign company. Half of the oilfields are in the Shia south and
most of the rest are in the north around Kirkuk.
The recently-opened oilfield is in the area controlled by the Kurdish
regional government near Irbil. Iraq's cheap-to-extract and easy-to-refine
crude could make the nation rival Saudi Arabia as the world's top oil
earner. Kurdistan's leaders want their oil to be exported now and the very
question of who has the right to sell Iraq's oil is in dispute.
Some maverick, mainly-foreign, oil companies have stolen a march on their
bigger rivals. The Kurdish Regional government has given the Norwegian oil
company DNO the first deal in the whole of post-Saddam Iraq to pump new
crude oil. DNO have rented a drilling rig from China, complete with a troop
of Chinese drillers. They struck oil at the first attempt, finding 250 mm
barrels.
Magne Normann, the managing director of DNO Middle East, said: "We were the
first international oil company that had the guts to go to Northern Iraq. We
didn't just talk about it, we did it."
But DNO's spectacular discovery isn't being applauded by all. Oil is so
bountiful across Iraq that some question the need for new exploration.
Indeed the central government in Baghdad has blacklisted some of the oil
companies that have signed deals with the Kurdish regional government.
Tariq Shafiq, co-author of the draft Iraqi oil law, said: "The problem is
they are thinking like Kurds and not like Iraqis. The Kurdistan government
has illegally been enacting contracts, the oil and gas asset is the property
of the whole nation."
Kurdish leaders are adamant they have full constitutional authority to sign
deals and say the moves were necessary because of Baghdad's failure to reach
agreement on an oil law. Iraq's second-biggest export pipeline passes 25
miles away from DNO's latest field and the Norwegian company has completed
its own pipeline to transfer the oil, but the final few metres pipe remain
unconnected.
The United States admits that it's pressing Baghdad to pass its oil law to
pump more oil and presumably help bring down world prices. Yet the impasse
between the central and regional governments remains.
Whoever it is that ends up controlling Iraq's black gold, it can't yet be
certain that Iraq's oil curse will one day turn into a blessing.
Source: www.channel4.com |