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Why are oil majors are coming back into Iraq

Freight News | November 6, 2009 | View Comments
  • In June many of the world’s biggest energy companies walked away from bidding on potentially rich oil fields in Iraq. While they liked the billions of barrels of reserves that were on offer, ENI (E), ExxonMobil (XOM), Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa), and others balked at the tough terms the Iraqis were proposing.

    Today they’re coming back—and getting roughly the same deal that was on
    the table during the summer. On Nov. 2, ENI initialed a contract to
    boost production in the Zubair field near Basra, which it estimates has
    6 billion barrels of reserves. Shell, Exxon, and ConocoPhillips (COP)
    also are in talks that could help boost Iraq’s oil production to more
    than 6 million barrels per day—behind only Saudi Arabia in OPEC. “This
    is the window in which if anything can happen it will happen,” says
    Alex Munton, an Iraq specialist at Edinburgh-based energy consultants
    Wood Mackenzie.

    The big oil companies are reconsidering Iraq because they realize this
    may be among their last opportunities to get large volumes of crude.
    Britain’s BP (BP), for instance, typically turns up its nose at
    anything below roughly 700 million barrels of reserves; Rumaila, about
    30 miles west of Basra, may have 20 billion barrels of recoverable oil,
    BP estimates. Another field in the same class is West Qurna, located
    north of Basra, where a group including Exxon Mobil and Shell is
    competing against a partnership of ConocoPhillips and Russia’s Lukoil
    for production rights.

    Majnoun, which the Iraqis will offer in December, could have 12 billion
    barrels. And Kirkuk, where Shell is hoping to get a contract, has at
    least 8.5 billion barrels. “It is fair to say that there are many
    people negotiating now who would not have taken $2 in profit per
    incremental barrel before,” Shell Chief Financial Officer Simon Henry
    said during the company’s Oct. 29 earnings conference call with
    reporters.

    A Threat to OPEC?

    The change of heart among oil majors could increase tensions in OPEC,
    which had assumed Iraqi production would remain low until the world
    regained its thirst for crude. As Iraqi output starts to rise, the
    Saudis and other big producers are likely to try to persuade Iraq—which
    belongs to OPEC but is exempt from its quotas—to toe the line. The
    Iraqis, though, may want to pump the maximum, arguing that other cartel
    members who have profited for years from Iraq’s market absence should
    bear any future production cuts. “This is an issue that is going to
    come to the forefront as deals progress,” says David Kirsch, an analyst
    with Washington consultancy PFC Energy.

    ENI’s deal is similar to the one BP agreed to after the June auction.
    ENI and its partners, Occidental Petroleum (OXY) and Korea Gas, plan to
    increase output at Zubair from the current level of 190,000 barrels per
    day to 1.125 million within seven years. The companies will recover all
    costs and receive $2 in profit for each barrel above today’s production
    level. In June they had insisted on $4.80 per incremental barrel. But
    after BP agreed to $2 per incremental barrel for tripling production at
    Rumaila—signing a deal on Nov. 3 in Baghdad—the benchmark price had
    been set. ENI says clarifications from Iraq on tax-related issues were
    critical in the decision to accept a lower price. “We got a contract
    that guarantees us the right return,” says Claudio Descalzi, ENI’s
    exploration and production chief.

    Of course, big obstacles remain. Security will always be a worry. If
    Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who has promoted the oil deals, is
    turned out in January elections, the investment climate could sour. And
    projects that do go through could be hampered by a shortage of skilled
    workers and infrastructure woes such as a lack of oil terminals and
    pipeline capacity to get Iraqi crude to foreign markets.

    What’s clear, though, is that Iraq has enormous potential. Its reserves
    stand at some 115 billion barrels, third largest in the world. Three
    fields alone—Rumaila, Zubair, and West Qurna—could triple Iraqi
    production from the current level of 2.5 million barrels per day in
    less than a decade. And much of Iraq remains relatively unexplored, so
    there’s always the possibility of finding more huge fields. “If Iraq
    and the international oil companies are able to bring these projects
    on,” says PFC’s Kirsch, “it certainly would eliminate concerns that
    global production is going to peak any time soon.’

    Source: Business Week

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