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BAGHDAD -- The Iraqi Oil Ministry said Thursday it awarded a consortium led by Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell PLC the right to develop the West Qurna-1 field in southern Iraq, representing the first American-led team gaining access to Iraq's oil patch.

The pact is the latest in a series of deals that Iraq has signed or initialed with some of the world's biggest oil companies. Earlier this week, Iraqi officials completed a final agreement with BP PLC and China National Petroleum Corp. and an initial agreement with a consortium led by Italy's Eni SpA. U.S. oil company Occidental Petroleum Corp. participated as a junior partner in the Eni-led bid.

For Exxon and Shell, two of the largest publicly listed oil companies, the deal grants entry into a country that boasts one of the world's largest reserves of petroleum. Like most of the oil-rich Middle East, the country has long been off limits to Western firms.

The structure of the deals -- essentially service contracts -- won't allow foreign companies to boost their own reported reserves and production numbers. Still, executives see them as providing access to Iraqi oil officials and a chance to work in the country's fields, both crucial if Iraq continues to open up to international companies.

For Iraqi officials, the deals are seen as accelerating the government's drive to boost production. Oil sales account for most government revenue. Iraqi engineers have struggled for years to boost production on their own, without much success.

The Exxon-Shell team had been seen as the favorite to win the contract, which calls for the consortium to boost production at the already-pumping field in exchange for a per-barrel fee. Among the three competitors, it offered the highest production target for the field, the oil ministry said.

An initial pact is expected to be signed later Thursday. The deal will then go to the Iraqi cabinet for approval before a final agreement can be signed, oil ministry spokesman Assem Jihad said.

Shell referred questions to Exxon. A representative for Exxon couldn't be immediately reached for comment.

The Exxon-Shell team beat out bids by a consortium made of Russia's Lukoil and ConocoPhillips, and another one led by CNPC.

After rejecting the oil ministry's payment terms as too stingy during a June auction, the three competitors for West Qurna later accepted the ministry's original $1.90-per-barrel payment. The fee will be paid for additional oil extracted above current production levels.

Originally, Exxon asked for a $4-per-barrel payment, while the Lukoil consortium proposed $6.49 a barrel. The CNPC team proposed $2.60 a barrel. West Qurna-1 is believed to have about 8.7 billion barrels in oil reserves.

The BP-CNPC group was the only consortium that didn't walk away from the summer bid round, agreeing to cut its own proposed fees drastically to secure an early deal for Iraq's super-giant Rumaila field.

Since the summer auction, the oil ministry continued talks with several firms regarding their bids. On Monday, Eni, along with partners Occidental and Korea Gas Corp. of South Korea, signed an initial agreement to develop the Zubair field in southern Iraq.

Iraqi officials hope the contracts for the Rumaila, West Qurna-1 and Zubair fields will help bring Iraq's oil production to seven million barrels a day in six years, compared to the current production level of about 2.5 million barrels a day. Iraqi officials have struggled for years to lift production.

Baghdad, even with foreign help, still faces major hurdles once work begins. Security across the country is still poor, though overall violence has fallen since the worst of Iraq's sectarian violence, following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

Another possible hurdle is the health of the oil fields themselves. Iraqi oil officials have complained for years that Saddam Hussein pushed them to produce too much oil, too quickly, without needed investment. Oil analysts have worried that may have damaged reservoirs irreparably.

Iraq will hold a second bid round in December for 10 unexplored oil and gas fields. Exxon Mobil, Lukoil, CNPC and other oil giants are among the more than 40 companies that are eligible to participate in that auction.
 
Posts: 3136 | Registered: Sat 18 June 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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The truth is that Bush has no current ties to big oil and neither do Chenney. Yet, the Clintons are tied to Dafur, Dubai, and China, and have recieved 20 million in speaking engagements from each and have yet to make a speach. Obama is connected to George Soro's who has billions invested in Oil.

Just for the Bush haters! Razz
 
Posts: 7598 | Registered: Tue 01 August 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Previous Posts as Jade_Gate
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One can hope that these oil deals will ease the pressure on oil prices. Though it has received little notice, even with the world in recession, oil prices have DOUBLED since Bush handed over the reins of government to Obama in January .. from roughly $40 per barrel to roughly $80.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: I_M_Qwerty,
 
Posts: 8130 | Registered: Sun 01 June 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Picture of SignalSgtWilliams
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quote:
Originally posted by I_M_Qwerty:
One can hope that these oil deals with ease the pressure on oil prices. Though it has received little notice, even with the world in recession, oil prices have DOUBLED since Bush handed over the reins of government to Obama in January .. from roughly $40 per barrel to roughly $80.


There was a time when it was higher during the Bush time. The world is getting bigger and bigger and the strain on power is getting worse. Either we find good alternative power or stop copulating.
 
Posts: 6013 | Registered: Fri 16 June 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by SignalSgtWilliams:
quote:
Originally posted by I_M_Qwerty:
One can hope that these oil deals with ease the pressure on oil prices. Though it has received little notice, even with the world in recession, oil prices have DOUBLED since Bush handed over the reins of government to Obama in January .. from roughly $40 per barrel to roughly $80.


There was a time when it was higher during the Bush time. The world is getting bigger and bigger and the strain on power is getting worse. Either we find good alternative power or stop copulating.




"Undeniably human population growth is at the root of pretty much every single environmental problem we currently face. At the most basic level we're talking about a question of scale. And Mongabay is reporting some relatively good news on this front. Population growth rates in parts of Asia are beginning to slow:

According to new data from the UN's Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, the region as a whole has seen population growth rates drop to 1.1%. That means that from 2000-2005 the average number of children per woman dropped to 2.4. Once that drops to 2.1 the region's population will start shrinking.

Countries in the region already below the rate of replacement include China, Thailand, Singapore and Sri Lanka. That's the good news."


"http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/05/world-population-growth-good-news-asia-pacific-rates-starting-to-decline.php
 
Posts: 7598 | Registered: Tue 01 August 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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