World's Armed Forces Forum
  << Previous Topic | Next Topic >>Forum Index  

China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal

August 29 2008 at 12:15 PM

Anonymous  (Login Type98G)
Middle kingdom(China)

China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal
Thursday, August 28, 2008 02:18 GMT (source)

Iraq and China agreed the renegotiated terms of an old deal signed in 1997

Iraq and China have agreed the terms of a $3 billion oil service contract, Iraq's oil minister says, announcing the first major oil contract with a foreign firm since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

The deal means China has taken the first opening since the US-led invasion for work on the world's third-largest reserves.

Hussain al-Shahristani, Iraq's oil minister, warned that time was running out for big Western oil firms, which have jostled for years for Iraqi contracts, to seal even the short-term deals that were expected to mark their return to the country.

Iraq and China's state-oil firm CNPC agreed the renegotiated terms of an old deal signed in 1997 to pump oil from the Adhab oilfield, Shahristani said.

CNPC is Asia's biggest oil and gas company.

"Finally we have reached an agreement," Shahristani said after clinching the deal.

Tough bargains

Iraq has toughened the terms, changing the contract to a set-fee service deal from the oil production sharing agreement signed under Saddam.

Iraq needs billions of dollars of investment in its energy sector after years of war and sanctions.

But with high oil prices and strong competition for access to some of the world's
cheapest oil to produce, Iraq has been negotiating from a position of strength.

Under the revised contract, Adhab will produce 110,000 barrels per day (bpd), up from the previous target of 90,000 bpd, Shahristani said.

First output would come in three years, and the field should pump for 20 years, he said.

CNPC would own 75 per cent of a joint venture to be set up for the contract, while Iraq's Northern Oil Company would own 25 per cent, he added. The value of the contract would be reviewed every quarter, he said.

The deal was pending the final seal from both countries' governments.

Hydroelectric deal

China's state hydroelectricity firm also signed a deal to build a new hydroelectric power station in Tajikistan on Wednesday worth up to $300 million officials said.

"The Chinese company undertakes to carry out the design and construction of the Nurobod" power station in eastern Tajikistan, read a memorandum of understanding signed by Sinohydro and the Tajik government.

The deal was signed on the sidelines of a visit by Hu Jintao, the Chinese president, aimed at bolstering economic ties between the two neighbours.

The trade turnover between China and Tajikistan amounted to $283 million last year.

China is already a major player in Tajikistan's road infrastructure, telecoms and electricity sectors.

Iraqi demands


High oil prices have put al-Shahristani in a strong negotiating position [EPA]
Iraq wanted six contracts to boost oil output by 100,000 bpd each to be signed in June and implemented within a year.

Baghdad does not want to extend the end-date for the contracts as it plans to sign long-term deals for the same fields by mid-2009.

"We only have about 10 months left," he said. "It seems more and more unlikely that these technical service contracts can be implemented now in such a short remaining time."

The firms that have been negotiating deals are Royal Dutch Shell; Shell in partnership with BHP Billiton; Exxon Mobil; Chevron with Total.

A smaller consortium of Anadarko, Vitol and Dome had negotiated for another deal but Anadarko walked away this month.

Iraq still aimed to boost output by 500,000 bpd by the mid-2009, Shahristani said.

Iraq pumped around 2.4 million bpd in July, according to a Reuters survey.

A long-delayed draft oil law to set the framework for foreign investment was unlikely to be approved in parliament in the near-future, Shahristani said.

"Different parliamentary blocs still have serious differences about the law," he said. "I have not heard anything new from the parliament to make me expect that the law will be passed any time soon."

But Iraq was going ahead with new deals anyway under existing legislation, he said.

Disputes with the regional government in Kurdistan have hobbled the progress of the law.

There had been no progress in resolving differences between Baghdad and the Kurdish regional government, Shahristani said.

http://english.aljazeera.net/business/2008/08/200882813538226440.html


 
 Respond to this message   
AuthorReply


(Login HBN2025)
Middle kingdom(China)

Re: China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal

August 29 2008, 10:53 PM 

Cool







 
 
Anonymous
(Login oneman28)
Member

Re: China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal

August 29 2008, 11:44 PM 

Not cool at all.

China and Iraq signed a much better contract for the oil field. and the contract was discarded after US invasion. let alone in 1997, oil was so cheap.


    
This message has been edited by oneman28 on Aug 30, 2008 1:28 AM


 
 

psingh01
(Login psingh01)
Elite WAFF Vet Club

Re: China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal

August 30 2008, 2:02 AM 

you signed agreement with saddam and his cronies. take it up with them lol

awesome policy bush and company have. go to war, get americans killed, now chinese come in and take the oil


 
 
Anonymous
(Login xChinawhitex)
Middle kingdom(China)

Re: China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal

August 30 2008, 6:57 AM 

This is better.

America invades Iraq hoping to steal all the oil and void previous agreements, they get their soldiers killed and China still gets the oil
.




 
 
Current Topic - China agrees $3bn Iraq oil deal  Respond to this message   
  << Previous Topic | Next Topic >>Forum Index