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Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

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Kurdish region to increase oil sales to global markets

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed May 28, 2014 5:46 pm

Kurdish region to increase oil sales to global markets

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Nechirvan Barzani said our goal is to export half a million barrels of oil every day to the global markets by the end of the year.

World Bulletin/News Desk

Our goal is to export half a million barrels of oil every day to the global markets by the end of the year, Nechirvan Barzani, head of the Kurdish Regional Government, said Wednesday.

"We are open to dialog and negotiations with Baghdad but we want 17 percent from the Iraqi budget. Baghdad acted unconstitutionally by cutting our share of the governmental budget. Oil sales are transparent and appropriate according to the constitution," Barzani told the regional parliament, adding that, "we can’t wait forever for a deal from Baghdad. We can sell our oil."

Baghdad filed a lawsuit against Ankara, after Kurdish oil was sold and transported through Turkey. The selling of the oil bypasses Iraq's national State Oil Marketing Company and violates the country’s constitution, Baghdad claims.

The oil has been sitting in the southeastern Turkish port of Ceyhan for the last six months, while Irbil and Baghdad negotiated an agreement for the oil sales.

The regional Kurdish government, however, says that Baghdad cut their share of the revenues from the national budget and that they are determined to export oil via Turkey in order to compensate for the loss, claiming to do so is a unequivocal constitutional right and in line with 2007's Iraq oil law.

Iraq holds the world's fifth largest known oil reserves with 143 billion barrels.

http://www.worldbulletin.net/news/13757 ... al-markets
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Kurdish region to increase oil sales to global markets

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Iraq: the continuing impact of politics on oil

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu May 29, 2014 9:15 pm

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Iraq: the continuing impact of politics on oil

Some five years ago, Iraq confidently announced that by 2015 it would be producing some 12 million (M) barrels of oil per day (bpd.) To set this claim in context: Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter, has a capacity of 12.5M bpd.

However, the Iraq Ministry of Oil’s new official target is some 60% lower: it is 4M bpd for end of year 2014. Further: Bloomberg reported Thamir Ghadhban, an adviser on oil issues to current Prime Minister (PM) al-Maliki, had suggested in an interview earlier this month that even this estimate was high; he indicated it would be some 3.75M bpd.

And according to Bloomberg News, which compiled the average of six analyst estimates, it may be as low as 3.4M bpd, about the same as April 2014.

If the sector is not actually in stasis it is certainly slumbering.

The reason for the narcoleptic hydrocarbons’ sector is the grid-lock of Iraqi politics, and the ability, or otherwise, of Baghdad to manage its relationship properly with the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).

Last weekend, for the avoidance of any doubt over their position, Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) President Massud Barzani announced the Kurds had rejected a third term in power for PM al-Maliki and stated the Kurds would hold a referendum if he tried to stay as Prime Minister.

Barzani made it quite clear that the 63 Kurdish Members of Parliament (designate) are lining up to face Baghdad as a collective bloc. In a political fishing trip Barzani said Kurdistan will make all efforts with other parties in order to find a true partner who will head the next Iraqi government. By definition that must mean in the eyes of the KRG the current incumbent is not a true partner.

It is clear that there is a slow coalescence of political opposition to PM al-Maliki, but whether or not it will turn concrete is as yet unclear. What is clear is the process is likely to be protracted and painful.

On Sunday, the KRG issued a chilly official response to the legal action launched by Baghdad against Irbil for the sale of oil stored in Turkey.

“The Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq (KRG) understands, from a media announcement on 23 May 2014, that the Ministry of Oil of the Federal Government of Iraq (MOO) has filed a “Request for Arbitration” against the Republic of Turkey and a Turkish state-owned entity. The motive of the MOO is, according to the announcement, to prevent the export of crude oil from the Kurdistan Region of Iraq through the Iraq-Turkey pipeline.

The MOO’s behaviour is inconsistent with previously established and accepted practice. It threatens Iraq’s oil export capacity and Iraq’s global diplomatic standing. The MOO also threatens Iraq’s relations with global oil traders and buyers. The MOO is acting in violation of the 2005 Iraq Constitution, in violation of Iraqi law, and in violation of international law. Its threats will fail.”

This clearly shows how fractured the relationship between Baghdad and Irbil has become, and how difficult it will be for both sides to back down.

Meanwhile, the stately dance continues to select a new PM and government, with the PM al-Maliki clearly having decided that he wants another four years in power.

As it stands at the moment, under the terms of the Iraqi Constitution, PM al-Maliki will have to be asked by the president to form the new government (which depends on Baghdad stopping bickering, and actually select a president).

2010 saw a personal struggle between PM al-Maliki with Iyad Allawi that lasted nine long months. However, in 2014, cobbling together a coalition with the requisite 164 votes may prove even harder than in 2010, as this time around PM al-Maliki has declared he does not want another government of national unity and it is becoming increasingly clear that he will find it difficult to get sufficient support.

PM al-Maliki has alienated the Kurds and the Sunnis, and despite much rhetoric, has not actually managed to unite the Shi’a behind him. The Sadrists and Ammar al-Hakim’s ISCI remain wildcards and loose cannons; they have a combined 65 seats and as a matter of public record they oppose a third term for PM al-Maliki. Iyad Allawi’s Wataniya coalition managed to secure 21 seats.

So, if PM al-Maliki’s disparate opponents managed to ally themselves into a formal opposition, then he would be facing a 180-seat opposition bloc and could not form a government. Some election results are being contested, so the numbers of seats are not yet solid – but they are accurate enough for a general estimate.

However, given the expected backing from Tehran, (unless persuaded otherwise) PM al-Maliki will probably manage to a compromise, but only after conceding major political concessions that will see him govern Iraq for a third time, but could also see a paradigm shift for Iraq from a federal to a confederal state.

Tehran will have to decide whether or not to whip al-Hakim and al-Sadr into line, but that carries risks too. Although it would mean the Shi’a parties were in the same coalition, the personal enmity between the Sadrists and the State of Law in particular means a majority Shi’a government would be structurally weak.

This would embolden Kurdistan to move more rapidly towards secession, and there are clear signs that other provinces, both Shi’a and Sunni, would not be averse to disengaging from Baghdad.

The only way the KRG will support PM al-Maliki is if they have a rock solid agreement from Baghdad to allow them to export their own oil.

However, if PM al-Maliki allows KRG to export its hydrocarbons then that would mean Baghdad agrees with Irbil’s interpretation of the Iraqi Constitution. This in turn would mean the KRG might be minded to cease talk - at least temporarily - of a referendum on independence.

Of course the strategic conundrum for PM al-Maliki is that were Baghdad to recognise the KRG’s right to export its own oil, other provinces would seek the same agreement, and thus Iraq would slowly implode.

PM al-Maliki knows this only too well and hence his uncompromising stance that he is open to work with any political party, but only on his terms.

This is hardly a good start point for negotiations.

He has let the Kurds know they are welcome in a new government coalition – but they have to accept his interpretation of the Iraqi Constitution on their right to export and sell oil.

This is hardly a good incentive for Irbil.

Even if PM al-Maliki stays in power, one thing is for sure: Iraq is going to feel like a completely different country.

http://www.oilvoice.com/n/Iraq_the_cont ... d790e.aspx
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu May 29, 2014 9:27 pm

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Kurdistan Premier: We Will Never Give Up Control of Our Own Oil

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Erbil welcomes any talks with Baghdad, "but we will never give up control of our own oil," Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani vowed before the Kurdish parliament on Wednesday, directing his message at the Iraqi government.

“We are open to dialogue, but if Baghdad chooses to close all the doors we will certainly not be standing there doing nothing,” the prime minister warned. “Selling our oil was a clear message for Baghdad to realize that we will not back down and will do what we have promised in the past."

Barzani's remarks come at a time when relations between Erbil and Baghdad have plummeted over independent oil exports started by Erbil, and Baghdad cutting the region’s budget as punishment for three consecutive months, creating a crisis for the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) as it struggles to pay civil servants.

Last week for the first time, the KRG started selling its oil through the Turkish Ceyhan port. The move provoked Baghdad's immediate condemnation, and a warning of legal action against Turkey for allowing the exports to take place.

The KRG has said that it sees the sale of the oil as its constitutional right.

Barzani said that Baghdad wants control over the Kurdish oil industry, which Erbil was unlikely to hand over.

"Baghdad says that the Iraqi government should be in charge of selling the oil, and we simply say that Baghdad is not entitled to our oil, because their demand is neither constitutional nor legal," Barzani told MPs.

He also said that the KRG agrees for the Iraqi government to monitor the export of Kurdish oil, "but we would never give control of our oil to the Iraqi government.”

The prime minister said that the decision to cut the KRG budget was made long before the sale of the Kurdish oil.

"When we arrived in Baghdad (in March) we assumed that Iraq was experiencing a financial crisis as a whole. But then we learned there that Iraq's economy was fine, and that the only place affected by the funding cut was the Kurdistan Region," Barzani said. He added that wages were cut on the direct orders of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

"The Iraqi finance minister told us that the budget had been cut on orders from the prime minister and commander-in-chief of the armed forces," said Barzani of a meeting of his Kurdish delegation in Baghdad.

Officially, Baghdad is supposed to give Kurdistan 17 percent of the national budget after sovereign expenses, flown in cash from the central bank to Erbil three times a month. But how much is actually paid is disputed. The premier said his government has received only 10 percent in the past. Barzani also said that Iraq owes nearly $5 billion to the Kurdistan Region in delayed funding.

The premier pledged that his government would “find a way” to pay wages, as Kurdistan seeks alternative sources of finance. “There are no guarantees that Iraq would not cut the KRG’s budget again," he warned.

http://rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/29052014
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Iraq-Kurdistan Dispute Escalates

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Jun 02, 2014 9:36 pm

Baghdad Warns Buyers of 'Stolen and Smuggled' Oil as Iraq-Kurdistan Dispute Escalates

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The Iraqi government has warned international oil companies against buying crude oil exported from Iraqi Kurdistan, saying it will take action against buyers of "stolen and smuggled" oil.

"The Ministry of Oil confirms its warning to the world companies and markets not to buy the oil cargo on the vessel (United Leadership) which is loaded with crude oil extracted from the oil fields of the Kurdistan region," the ministry said in a statement.

The crude oil tanker made global headlines when it departed from Turkey's Ceyhan port in May, loaded with crude oil exported by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) via the newly finished pipeline to Turkey. The oil was exported without the approval of the central Iraqi government in Baghdad.

The United Leadership vessel reversed course after seemingly heading for the United States Gulf Coast, according to ship tracking and market analysts. The reversal has prompted speculation that the exporters have yet to find a buyer.

Iraq's oil ministry said it is tracking the oil tanker and said its cargo left the country illegally and without the permission of Iraq's federal government and oil ministry.

Baghdad has filed for arbitration against Turkey in a bid to prevent Ankara from importing and exporting oil from the KRG without central government approval.

The Kurdish leadership has said its oil exports are in line with the country's constitution and that it has exported oil in trucks via Turkey and Iran for years.

The dispute between Iraq and Kurdistan erupted over Arbil's desire to sell oil via the new pipeline. The bitter standoff has become entrenched and has prompted the KRG to act without Baghdad's approval.

"There is no going back," KRG's prime minister Nechirvan Barzani told parliament in May.

"If we cannot reach a shared understanding, we have other options and we cannot wait forever. Why did we begin selling oil? In order to make Baghdad realise that we can do it," he added.

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/baghdad-warns- ... es-1450859
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jun 05, 2014 9:16 pm

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Oil Search provides a drilling report on Taza 2 well



Oil Search reports that at 06:00 hours KRI time on 4 June 2014, the Taza 2 well was at a depth of 3,635 metres and drilling ahead in a 6-1/8' hole. Hydrocarbon shows continue to be observed through the Euphrates and Kirkuk Formations. Drilling progress for the week was 134 metres.

The forward plan is to drill ahead to the Shiranish Formation.

Taza 2 is located 10 kilometres north-west of Taza 1 and is designed to appraise the hydrocarbon-bearing intervals discovered by Taza 1 (Jeribe/Dhiban and Euphrates/Kirkuk Formations), as well as explore deeper Tertiary and Cretaceous targets including the Shiranish Formation.

The participants in Taza 2 are:

Oil Search (Iraq) Limited1 60%
Total E&P Kurdistan Region of Iraq (Taza) B.V. 20%
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) 20%
Total 100%

1Oil Search's funding interest is 75%, with the KRG's 20% interest carried by Oil Search and Total E&P Kurdistan Region of Iraq (Taza) B.V.

http://www.oilvoice.com/n/Oil_Search_pr ... 4b123.aspx
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jun 05, 2014 9:19 pm

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Premier Barzani Denies Oil Exports a Prelude to Kurdish Independence

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ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani denied that Kurdish oil exports were a prelude to seeking independence from Iraq, saying Erbil only wanted to ensure it receives the revenues promised to it under the constitution.

In a speech to the Kurdistan parliament on Wednesday, Barzani blamed Baghdad for a current row over independent oil exports by Erbil, saying that many problems could have been avoided if the central government had reached an agreement on sharing the revenues from oil sales.

“We don’t see this (oil exports) as a way for the independence of Kurdistan. Indeed it is not so!” declared Barzani, who is officially prime minister of a caretaker government until a new Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) is announced.

“We want to implement our constitutional rights within Iraq,” he said, answering questions from MPs about Kurdistan’s oil policy.

The oil issue has been at the center of one of the worst rows between the KRG and the Shiite Arab-led government in Baghdad.

Erbil opened its new pipeline to the Turkish port of Ceyhan in December, but after strong opposition from Baghdad Ankara said it would hold off on allowing the sales until consent from the central government.

However, after months of bickering and acrimony, including Baghdad freezing Erbil out of the national budget for months, no agreement was reached.

Then late last month, the KRG confirmed that a tanker loaded with the first sale of one million barrels of Kurdish oil had left Ceyhan for an unknown destination.

Earlier this week, KRG spokesman Safeen Dizayee told Rudaw that the tanker had “reached its destination.”

International news agencies, citing vessel tracking services, reported that the United Leadership tanker had seemingly originally set course for the United States Gulf Coast, but had then stopped and taken a U-turn in the Atlantic, sailing for the Moroccan coastal city of Mohammedia.

Since the oil was picked up and the tanker set sail from Ceyhan, the KRG never announced the identity of the buyer, or where the cargo was destined for.

However, reports about the tanker’s erratic trail suggest there could be complications in selling Kurdish oil, according to oil experts quoted by the Bloomberg news agency.

Baghdad has called the oil sales “illegal,” and the United States has consistently opposed independent Kurdish energy exports.

Barzani, meanwhile, reaffirmed the legality of KRG’s oil policy.

“We are absolutely confident about what we have done, which is in the interest of the people of Kurdistan and the framework of the Iraqi constitution,” he said.

Barzani also vowed to make transparency in the energy sector a top priority of his next cabinet.

“We want to deal with this in a transparent way. We want to turn this matter (oil) into a national one and end the saga of whether it’s transparent or not,” he said.

“The problem with the federal government regarding oil is that it wants to control of this dosser,” Barzani complained.

“If they (Baghdad) had reached an agreement with us on the distribution of oil revenues, which is the most important law for Iraq, many problems would have been resolved,” he said.

The bone of contention between Erbil and Baghdad is over who controls revenues. The Kurds rejected demands by Baghdad that the sales should be conducted by the State Oil Marketing Organization, inviting SOMO only as an observer.

Barzani reiterated a complaint that many Kurdish leaders have made, namely that Erbil is entitled to 17 percent of the national budget, but that Baghdad has failed to consistently deliver more than 10 percent.

“The government’s load is very heavy -- for your information 850 billion Iraqi dinars is spent only to pay for civil servants’ salaries only in a month,” Barzani disclosed.

“To reach an international standard we need $41 billion in investments for infrastructure, including roads, hospitals and schools.”

He also answered the long-pending question about the duration of the KRG’s energy deal with Turkey, saying the accord is valid for 50 years, with the possibility of extension.

“The protocol with Turkey is not to divide Iraq, but to get our own 17 percent of the budget,” Barzani stressed.

http://rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/05062014
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jun 05, 2014 9:22 pm

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Kurds accuse Baghdad of oil grab

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ERBIL, Iraq, June 5 (UPI) --The Iraqi central government in Baghdad aims to control the issue of oil "completely," the prime minister of the semiautonomous Kurdish government said.

The United Leadership, a crude oil tanker, is parked off the coast of Morocco with more than 1 million barrels of Kurdish oil taken last month from a Turkish sea port.

The Kurdish and central governments are at odds over who controls what in terms of oil. Baghdad said the export is a violation of the national constitution, though the Kurdistan Regional Government contests the allegation.

KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani told Kurdish lawmakers who controls Iraq's oil is the "big question" in the country.

"[Our] counterparts in Baghdad did not identify 'right' or 'wrong' KRG actions," he said in remarks published Thursday. "They just wanted to control the issue completely."

The central government in Baghdad filed a case at an international court of arbitration in Paris to challenge the export.

The prime minister said the Kurdish government "resorted" to exports from the Turkish port because Baghdad cut its share of the federal budget. Any cooperation with the Turkish government, he said, wasn't part of a move to increase Kurdish autonomy.

"We do not consider this to be a political move to divide Iraq," he said.

http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Energy ... 401976426/
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jun 05, 2014 9:27 pm

Gulf Times

Moroccan authorities tell Iraqi Kurdish oil tanker to leave port

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KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani (PICTURED) said last week the tanker was designed to show Baghdad that the Kurds controlled their own oil sales. But Iraq’s central government in Baghdad, which has deemed any exports of oil not under its control illegal, so far appears to have been successful in warding off potential buyers.

Reuters, Bloomberg/London

Iraqi Kurdistan’s bid to sell its first tanker of crude oil appeared to suffer a second setback in as many weeks yesterday after Moroccan authorities ordered the ship to leave its waters.

The United Leadership tanker, a symbol of a long-running feud between Baghdad and the Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) over oil sale rights, loaded one million barrels of Kurdish crude on May 22 and has changed course twice abruptly without discharging oil.

KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani said last week the tanker was designed to show Baghdad that the Kurds controlled their own oil sales.

But Iraq’s central government in Baghdad, which has deemed any exports of oil not under its control illegal, so far appears to have been successful in warding off potential buyers.

Nadia Laraki, director-general at Morocco’s national port agency, said the tanker did not berth at Mohammedia and left without unloading at the request of the Moroccan authorities but declined to say which ones.

The tanker is owned by Marine Management Services MC in Piraeus, Greece, a database maintained for the UN’s maritime agency shows. Kyriakos Maragoudakis, the company’s operations and marine manager, declined to comment. The ship is about 40 miles off Morocco’s Atlantic coast, having got within five miles of the port of Mohammedia, ship tracking data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“We are monitoring the movements of this tanker and anyone who deals with this oil will be prosecuted,” Iraqi oil ministry spokesman Asim Jihad said by phone from Baghdad yesterday.

“It’s not for us to say if it will return to the port...if the tanker gets the required authorisations, it will dock in Mohammedia port, otherwise it will not,” Laraki said.

After first sailing towards the US Gulf Coast, according to tanker tracking data and shipping sources, the vessel turned back towards the Mediterranean at the end of last week.

It sailed to a refinery at the port of Mohammedia on June 2 and after sitting anchored for two days, sailed to just off the coast, ship tracking data showed yesterday.

This is the first attempt to sell a shipload of Kurdish crude, which has been exported to Turkey via the region’s newly built pipeline. “This tells me that the KRG is facing real difficulties finding a buyers,” Ayham Kamel, director of the Middle East and North Africa at Eurasia Group.

“Many analysts expected that since the KRG already had a process to sell before with trucks ... that this could be replicated on a bigger scale.”

Baghdad has repeatedly said that state marketer SOMO is the only body allowed to export Iraqi oil and has hired a law firm to pursue anyone who buys it.

A source familiar with the matter said Iraq immediately sought assurances from Morocco’s state oil company, foreign and energy ministries that it would not permit the tanker to discharge its oil.

The Moroccan, Iraqi and Kurdish governments either declined to comment or did not respond to requests from Reuters for comment on the tanker on Wednesday and yesterday.

“Baghdad was turning a blind eye before and now hired a top international law firm, the fact that they are actively pursuing buyers is making a difference and deterring potential buyers of Kurdish crude,” Kamel at Eurasia Group said.
In late 2013, Iraq hired Vinson and Elkins to pursue buyers of Kurdish oil.

Tensions between Iraq and the Kurdish region escalated last month when the KRG began pumping oil through its own pipeline to Ceyhan, the Turkish port in the Mediterranean sea from where ship tracking data show United Leadership loaded. The tanker crossed the Strait of Gibraltar, signaling for the US Gulf, then turned back after about 190 miles. It then sailed to Mohammedia, tracking shows.

The KRG estimates its region has about 45bn barrels of crude reserves. Iraq, which has has about 150bn barrels without the Kurdish reserves, surpassed Iran in 2012 to become the second biggest oil producer in the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Shipping signals can be wrong because much of the information is entered manually and because not all data are captured.
Disputes about cargoes sometimes delay merchant ships. A tanker called the ETC Isis spent months marooned off Singapore in 2012 as part of a dispute between northern and southern Sudan. Earlier this year, US special forces boarded a tanker shipping crude from eastern Libya that the nation’s government said was illegally shipped.

http://www.gulf-times.com/eco.-bus.%20n ... leave-port
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jun 05, 2014 9:36 pm

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Dezae: Kurdistan Region has a constitutional right to export oil

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Safeen Dezae spokesman for the Kurdistan Regional Government: the export of oil is Kurdistan Region’s constitutional right and the region is resorting to the sale of oil to resolve current financial crisis caused by illegal measures taken by the federal government against Kurdistan Region.

Dezae stressed that Kurdistan Regional Government will announce the amount of oil revenues to all citizens through the documents and evidence soon.

The federal government forced us to sell oil Kurdistan Region, we always seek to reach a suitable solution with the federal government through dialogue and activating the joint committees, but unfortunately Baghdad did not have a positive stance regarding this issue, Dezae, clarified.

PUKmedia

http://www.pukmedia.com/EN/EN_Direje.aspx?Jimare=20556
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 07, 2014 10:59 pm

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DNO International provides an update on production from the Tawke field

DNO International ASA ("DNO"), the Norwegian oil and gas operator, announced that production from the Tawke field in the Kurdistan region of Iraq reached 120,021 barrels of oil per day in May, the first time average monthly production has exceeded 100,000 barrel per day. May production was split 60-40 between local sales and deliveries to the export pipeline at Fish Khabur.

Ahead of its Annual General Meeting to be held at 10:00 CET in Oslo, the Company also announced that production from the Tawke field passed the 75 million barrels cumulative mark on 31 May.

Plans to increase Tawke deliverability to 200,000 barrels per day by yearend 2014 continue on schedule. As part of that expansion program, production testing has commenced on Tawke-26, the first of two recently completed Tawke horizontal wells, with Tawke-24 to follow. A third horizontal well, Tawke-25, is drilling ahead at 1,873 metres.

Elsewhere in Kurdistan, sales of natural gas from the Summail field to the Dohuk power plant commenced in late May and currently average 60 million cubic feet per day from the first well, some 20 percent ahead of plan. Sales will climb as a second well is put on production in June, followed by a third well later this summer.

"We are focused like a laser on scale and speed of delivery, notwithstanding stretch targets, across our portfolio of assets," said Bijan Mossavar-Rahmani, DNO International's Executive Chairman.

In the Sultanate of Oman, the West Bukha-5 well has been returned to service following an extensive workover, and tested 2,600 barrels per day of oil and liquids and 10 million cubic feet per day of natural gas, increasing Block 8 deliveries.

In the Republic of Yemen, at 7,804 barrels per day, gross oil production in May from Blocks 32, 43 and 53 was up some 20 percent from the first quarter 2014 figure, although security conditions remain challenging and continue to impact certain drilling and production operations.

http://www.oilvoice.com/n/DNO_Internati ... 03d5b.aspx
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Kurdish Oil Puts Region at Political Crossroads

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Jun 09, 2014 10:06 am

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Kurdish Oil Puts Region at Political Crossroads
By Stephen Dockery

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Recent progress in the Kurdistan Region’s energy sector has put the autonomous enclave at a crossroads that could prove hugely significant to long-term political and economic developments, analysts and experts told Rudaw.

The Kurdistan Regional Government finished building a pipeline late last year that connects its oil and gas to world markets through Turkey’s Ceyhan port, and KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani disclosed last week that Erbil has a 50-year oil deal with Ankara.

But the first shipment of Kurdish oil has had a troubled journey aboard a tanker that has been held in the Mediterranean due to US pressure, Kurdish officials told Rudaw on Friday.

Michael Knights, an Iraq expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said that there are two competing visions for the oil development: the plan that sees Kurdistan’s economic independence in the medium- to long-term future, and the one that sees it as already here.

“You only get to roll the dice once, but which one do you want to do?” Knights asked. “The problem is this: the oil industry, if they try to go economically independent this year and something goes badly with it, that will put a shadow over the sector.”

The pipeline to Ceyhan opened in December, and before long more than two million barrels of Kurdish oil was stored on the Mediterranean coast. Erbil and Ankara delayed the sale, hoping to resolve its dispute with Baghdad.

But following a decision by Baghdad to freeze the Kurdistan Region’s monthly budget in January, Kurdish authorities decided to sell their own oil to compensate for their 17 percent share of the national budget held by the central government.

The US said it did not support independent oil exports from Kurdistan, while Washington’s initial attempts to bring Erbil and Baghdad together appear to have come to a dead end.

“(The Americans) are highly involved, but they haven’t had a great deal of success moving either side off of their basic positions,” Knights said about the Baghdad-Erbil dispute.

Denise Natali, from National Defense University in Washington DC, said there is an interest in Iraq maximizing oil production through its northern corridor, but that it is equally important that Erbil and Baghdad resolve their disputes before drastic steps are taken to rely on Turkey for the exports.

“There’s every reason that this could be a win-win situation if it could be done in a legal way,” Natali said. “Pretty much everybody wants Iraq to maximize the northern corridor, including Kurdish crude.”

“All of these things are coming together to show the world, to show investors, to show Iraqis, that the Kurds are going to move forward with their plans,” Natali added.

“The question remains how much do you want to sell, under what conditions and what timing,” she noted. “The fact that it’s going to different ports and it’s considered hot cargo is not good for the Kurdistan region.”

For their part, Kurdish authorities are aware of the complications surrounding the oil issue. However, they defend their act as constitutional and say that Erbil still hopes to reach a lasting agreement with Baghdad through dialogue.

“We are open to dialogue, but if Baghdad chooses to close all the doors we will certainly not be standing there doing nothing,” KRG Prime Minister Barzani told the Kurdish parliament recently. “Selling our oil was a clear message for Baghdad to realize that we will not back down and will do what we have promised in the past."

In his speech before parliament, Barzani said that Iraq owes nearly $5 billion to the Kurdistan Region in delayed funding.

Joel Wing, a long-time Iraq blogger and analyst, believes that the energy dispute between Baghdad and Erbil is part of broader political disagreements in Iraq.

“The political dispute is the real reason why they are pushing so hard on (oil) right now,” Wing said. “I think the rhetoric is just going to keep on in a very high level and that’s going to play out in the government formation.”

Wing believes that the current dispute will be even harder to resolve given the serious Kurdish-Sunni opposition to the nomination of Nouri al-Maliki as Iraq’s prime minister for a third term.

To approach the problem of budgets and authority, Erbil and Baghdad will have to reconcile over Kurdistan’s long-term role in Iraq, said Nussaibah Younis, from Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

“At its heart the problem is that the KRG and the Iraqi central government fundamentally disagree on the terms on which the KRG is to be part of Iraq,” Younis said.

http://rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/080620141
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Jun 09, 2014 7:49 pm

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Second Tanker of Kurdish Oil Leaves Turkey Despite Baghdad Protest

A second shipment of Iraqi Kurdish crude has sailed from the Turkish port of Ceyhan, industry and government sources said, increasing the stakes in a battle with Baghdad over control of oil sales from the autonomous region.

The United Emblem suezmax tanker, carrying 1 million barrels of crude, sailed from the harbour on Turkey's Mediterranean coast on Monday, Reuters AIS Live ship tracking showed.

The shipment is the second to leave Ceyhan in three weeks after arriving by pipeline. At least 2 million barrels of Kurdish crude are now at sea, despite protests from Baghdad that only the central government has the right to sell Iraqi oil.

The Kurdish Regional Government has said the oil shipments are designed to show Baghdad it will exercise control over its own oil sales, but so far it has failed to find a buyer for its first tanker shipment, which left Ceyhan over two weeks ago.

Neither Kurdistan's Ministry of Natural Resources nor a spokesman for the regional government was immediately available to comment. Oil ministry officials in Baghdad were also not immediately available.

The Hunt for Buyers

Last week the first tanker, the United Leadership, sailed away from Morocco after the North African country declined to let the vessel unload its 1-million-barrel crude cargo at the Mohammeddia refinery.

Italy has also warned oil traders they face potential legal action if they buy the Kurdish crude, after discussions with the Iraq central government at its embassy in Baghdad.

The regional government originally said the oil would be sold to German or Italian refiners, but so far the United Leadership has not sailed towards those destinations. On Monday, it remained about 30 miles (48 km) off the Moroccan coast.

The United Leadership and the United Emblem are listed in tanker tracking as "For Orders", an industry term indicating that a final buyer of the crude has not yet been arranged.

Until last month, Kurdish oil exports were constrained to a small volume sent by truck to two Turkish ports on the Mediterranean. Iraq's state marketer made threats of legal action but did not follow through.

But the start of deliveries on a new Kurdish pipeline that currently pumps around 100,000 barrels per day to Ceyhan means significantly higher revenues for the region.

Iraq and Kurdistan have been trying to reach a political agreement over oil sales, but five months after the pipeline started up there had still been no final decision, prompting the regional government to go it alone.

Kurdish crude stored at Ceyhan had reached 2.8 million barrels at the end of last week, Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said on Friday.

(By Orhan Coskun and David Sheppard; Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Istabul, Isabel Coles in Erbil and Ahmed Rasheed in Baghdad; Editing by Dale Hudson)

http://www.marinelink.com/news/kurdish- ... 70724.aspx
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Jun 13, 2014 12:41 pm

This map shows how violence in Iraq could threaten the oil supply

Iraq is in chaos, as a group of Islamic militants has overrun the northwestern part of the country. And that means plenty of headlines like this one: "Oil prices spike as Iraq violence flares."

So what does the violence in Iraq mean for oil? So far, the violence has only affected a relatively small slice of Iraq's oil infrastructure — though there's still the potential for things to get much, much worse. This map from Securing America's Future Energy is a great place to start:

Image

Some basics: Iraq (including Kurdistan) has the world's fifth-largest proven oil reserves. But the country has only very recently begun churning out significant amounts of crude oil again (production dropped sharply during the 2003 US invasion and its bloody aftermath).

By April 2014, Iraq was producing an estimated 3.3 million barrels per day — equal to about 4 percent of global supply. And the country was expected to keep ramping up production, with plans to produce at least 5 million barrels per day in the years to come.

Or at least that was the idea. The recent takeover of northwestern Iraq by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) has complicated those plans considerably.

True, as the map above shows, ISIS isn't close to any of the truly massive oil fields in the southern regions of Iraq. And ISIS has yet to enter the Kurdish regions in the north, another major oil-producing area. But the fighting has threatened some of Iraq's other key infrastructure — including a pipeline that can deliver 600,000 barrels of oil per day from Kirkuk to the Turkish port city of Ceyhan. (That pipeline had been damaged by a 2013 attack and was offline anyway, but it was expected to be repaired soon.)

There's also potential for things to get a lot worse. If the conflict spreads further into the Kurdish regions, that could disrupt operations in the large Kirkuk oil field near the city of Mosul, which now produces around 260,000 barrels of oil per day — and accounts for one-sixth of the country's proven reserves.

Oil markets, for their part, seem jittery. The price of Brent crude oil for July delivery jumped 2.8 percent on Thursday, to $113 per barrel — the highest level since last September:

Image

It's worth noting that prices have been hovering around this level for the past three years. So clearly Iraq isn't the only reason prices are high. More fundamentally, there's a supply and demand issue — the world is growing and demanding more oil, and suppliers are struggling to keep up.

Still, the recent growth of Iraq's KRG oil industry was supposed to bring more oil to the global markets and ease this pressure somewhat. But as we've seen repeatedly over the last three years, unexpected conflicts — in Libya, in Syria, in Venezuela, and now in Iraq — always seem to throw a wrench in those plans.


http://www.vox.com/2014/6/12/5805282/th ... oil-supply
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Jun 13, 2014 11:29 pm

Washington Post

New oil pipeline boosts Iraqi Kurdistan, the region made of three northern provinces

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Erbil, the regional capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, has all the trappings of an oil boomtown. It bristles with construction cranes. Land Cruisers and Range Rovers with tinted windows ply the busy streets. Oil workers and briefcase-bearing foreigners crowd into the Divan Erbil Hotel’s piano bar.

At the foot of the 8,000-year-old Citadel — which claims to be the oldest continuously inhabited town in the world — currency traders in the central market swap dollars, euros and Turkish liras for Iraqi dinars. Shoppers flock to Erbil’s Family Mall, which features stores such as French hypermarket Carrefour and Spanish clothing chain Mango.

With the opening of a new oil pipeline, the boom is getting a boost. Crude that used to be transported by truck across the rugged, mountainous terrain of the three northern provinces known as Iraqi Kurdistan began flowing in stages through the pipeline in January.

The conduit, built by the Kurdistan Regional Government, or KRG, runs about 250 miles from Khurmala, southwest of Erbil, to the Turkish border, where it connects with an existing link to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. Oil that sells for about $70 a barrel domestically could fetch $100 or so in world markets.

The KRG said in October that the average output would be 400,000 barrels a day in 2014 and could jump to 1 million barrels by 2015 and twice that much by 2019. For 5.2 million Kurds in an area roughly the size of Switzerland, the influx of foreign investment and rising oil-related income promises an improving standard of living as the rest of the country remains mired in sectarian violence.

Since the KRG began selling oil contracts to foreign investors in 2007, per capita gross domestic product in Kurdistan has soared; it hit $5,600 in 2012, up from $800 10 years ago. The boom has also benefited oil exploration companies, especially those that placed early bets.
Risk and reward

Beginning with the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, the development of natural resources across all of Iraq, including Iraqi Kurdistan in the north, was virtually on hold for more than two decades. That’s because a series of full-blown conflicts and internecine clashes preoccupied first Saddam Hussein and then the fractious leadership in Baghdad that followed his ouster by U.S. and U.K. coalition forces in 2003.

Since then, almost daily clashes in the south have pitted the Shiite majority that dominates Iraq politically against the Sunni minority that held sway under Hussein. In the north, the population is overwhelmingly Sunni and relatively free of sectarian strife. In fact sheets for foreign investors, the KRG says no coalition soldiers have been killed and no foreigners kidnapped in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Todd Kozel, chief executive officer of Bermuda-based Gulf Keystone Petroleum, came to Iraqi Kurdistan three years after the 2003 invasion.

“If you were an oilman in 2006, with oil in your blood, you just had to be here,” he says, sipping Johnnie Walker Black Label at the Divan.

Kozel, 47, says he saw opportunity in a land where high risk would be highly rewarded. And it was. Since Gulf Keystone discovered oil at Iraqi Kurdistan’s Shaikan field in 2009, its market value has grown to about $1.66 billion from about $80 million.

The first foreign exploration firm to come to Kurdistan — in 2004 — was Oslo-based DNO International. Chairman Bijan Mossavar-Rahmani says DNO plans to increase output from its Tawke field to about 200,000 barrels a day this year from about 125,000 in 2013, showing how companies will hike production when their oil can be sold at higher world-market prices.

Tony Hayward came to Kurdistan after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico cost him his job as BP’s chief executive — in part because of a string of public-relations fiascoes that included his saying “I would like my life back” to a group of reporters while touring an oil-slicked beach in Louisiana.

In 2011, Hayward joined forces with British financier Nathaniel Rothschild to acquire a Turkish firm already operating in Kurdistan. The firm, renamed Genel Energy, says it’s poised to raise production at Taq Taq and other fields to 70,000 barrels a day this year from 44,000 in 2013. On May 8, Hayward was named chairman of Glencore Xstratam, a mining company that is also one of the world’s biggest crude traders.

Since 2011, four big oil companies — Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Hess and Total — have followed 30 or so smaller players into Iraqi Kurdistan and signed exploration deals. Hayward, whose career straddles oil majors and minors, says the pattern is a familiar one.

“There are lots of entrants early on, the real frontier types,” Hayward says in his London office. “Then the big guys arrive, and there’s consolidation. If you’re a little guy, you have to get there early.”
Transforming Iraq

The oil boom is transforming a part of Iraq that ethnic Kurds throughout the South Caucasus and Middle East consider their homeland. Unlike Kurdish enclaves in Iran, Turkey, Syria and Armenia, Iraqi Kurdistan is self-ruled, having gained autonomous status in a 1970 agreement with the central government in Baghdad.

Though it defers to the government on most external affairs such as treaties and membership in international organizations, the KRG has its own parliament, issues its own visas and has its own army, the Peshmerga — meaning “those who confront death” in Kurdish.

Oil is also changing relations between Iraqi Kurdistan and the central government. They’ve been tense for decades — never more so than in the closing days of the war with Iran, when Hussein’s forces launched a chemical attack on the Kurdish city of Halabja, killing as many as 5,000 people in retaliation for collusion between Kurdish and Iranian fighters.

In 1991, at the end of the Gulf War, the U.S. and its allies established a safe haven in Iraqi Kurdistan enforced by a no-fly zone. While the no-fly zone effectively created a buffer between the Kurds and their masters in Baghdad, accelerating economic development in the north, the north-south dispute over oil carried on.

Iraq’s State Oil Marketing Organization maintains that it has exclusive rights to the sale of Iraqi Kurdistan’s oil, whether it flows through the new pipeline or through pipelines outside of Iraqi Kurdistan.

In December, the KRG agreed to work with the central government in Baghdad in determining how to distribute revenue from Kurdistan oil exports, though a lot of questions remain unanswered, according to Sanford C. Bernstein financial research firm.

“The resource base is too big for a solution not to be found,” the Beveridge analysts wrote.

The new pipeline, fully in KRG territory, should make it easier for Kurdistan to overcome central government resistance and get its oil to market, says Gareth Stansfield, a senior associate at the Royal United Services Institute, a London-based research organization.

“If the Kurds are able to pump the amounts of oil they’re promising, then this is a fundamental geopolitical game changer,” Stansfield says. “It gives the Kurds economic independence from Baghdad.”

Many Iraqi Kurds want more than that: Almost 60 percent of those surveyed supported statehood in a 2012 poll by the Kurdistan Institute for Political Issues.
North vs. south

Iraq ranks fifth in the world in proven oil reserves — 150 billion barrels, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2013. The KRG says Kurdistan alone — comprising less than a 10th of Iraqi territory — holds 45 billion barrels. If the autonomous region were a country, its reserves would rank it 10th in the world, after Libya, according to BP.

While oil production has soared in the north, slower output in the war-torn south has kept Iraq-wide production low: Only in recent months has output reached 1979 levels of 3.62 million barrels a day, according to OPEC.

The hassles of dealing with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s Baghdad government compound sluggish production in the south, says Paolo Scaroni, CEO of Eni, Italy’s biggest oil company. Eni is one of several large companies, including BP and Royal Dutch Shell, operating in the south.

“We’re suffering from a lot of complex bureaucracy,” Scaroni says.

Eni had planned to invest $7 billion this year in developing its oil business in the south; it will end up spending only $3 billion, he says.

In the north, it’s a different story. Genel has been shipping crude to Turkey by truck, with 700 tankers rolling out of its Taq Taq field every day. With the new pipeline expected to be fully up and running later this year, the company says it’s poised to take advantage of the new transportation capability by increasing production.

The KRG’s Ministry of Natural Resources says its goal is to transport 300,000 barrels a day by the end of the year via the pipeline, shifting a sizable portion of exports away from tanker transport, not to mention pipelines controlled by the government in Baghdad.

Hayward, who visited southern Iraq as the head of BP from 2007 to 2010, says he was impressed by the contrast between Erbil and Baghdad when he first traveled to the north in 2011.

“The thing that really struck me was the amount of development that was taking place,” Hayward says of Erbil. “It felt safe, secure and prosperous.”

Oil is also helping to change the relationship between Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan.

Beginning in the 1980s, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, known by its Kurdish acronym, PKK, began an armed struggle against the Turkish government, seeking to establish an independent Kurdish nation in and around northern Iraq — including the Kurdish-dominated area of eastern Turkey. Turkey was wary of Iraqi Kurdistan as a staging area for PKK paramilitaries.

In 2003, Turkey, though a NATO member, refused to allow U.S. troops to invade Iraq from the north through Turkish territory partly out of concern the invasion would, in toppling the Hussein regime that had oppressed the Kurds, promote Kurdish independence movements. The PKK and the Turkish government agreed to a cease-fire in March 2013, easing tensions.

“Turkey’s been a big help,” Gulf Keystone’s Kozel says. “All our drilling rigs come through there.”

Iraqi Kurds — fearing their enemies, distrustful of neighboring governments, victims of Hussein’s genocidal attacks — are used to doing whatever they can to determine their destiny, Hayward says.

“It’s clear as the Kurds get more and more production and infrastructure, they’re just going to do their own thing,” he says. “As they like to say, ‘We have no friends but the mountains.’ ”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/ ... story.html
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Re: Kurdistan Oil & Gas Development

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jun 14, 2014 5:04 pm

BAS NEWS

The Head of Gas Factories for Kurdistan Region, Bakhtiyar Abdullah Peshdari, stated that the Kurdistan Region does not have a gas issue and that production is increasing. He also said that Peshmarga forces are busy protecting North Gas in Kirkuk.

Peshdari revealed to BasNews that despite the violence in Iraq, the Kurdistan Region’s gas from Kirkuk has not decreased.

Following the violence in Mosul, demand for gas and oil has increased, but luckily production is increasing as well and the price is stable.

According to statistics, 200 tons of gas is exported from Kirkuk to the Kurdistan Region every day.

“Our gas production is increasing, and we send gas to Mosul,” said Peshdari.

He also mentioned that the Kurdistan Region’s gas comes from Kirkuk but is not related to the Beji Refinery. Peshmarga Forces are protecting North Gas where Kurdistan Region’s gas comes from.

In regards to fuel, Peshdari pointed out that the Kurdistan Region has no risk of low fuel because it is produced within the region.

http://basnews.com/en/News/Details/Pesh ... tory/23274
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