China, Iraq Offer Concessions to Seal Oil Deal

29 August 2008 China National Petroleum Corp.’s (CNPC) new 20-year service contract to develop Iraq’s Al-Ahdab oil field — the first oil deal signed since Saddam Hussein’s overthrow in 2003 — preserves some of the choicer elements of its 1997 production sharing agreement (PSA). But both sides offered concessions in a bid to bring the negotiations launched last year to a conclusion, Iraqi sources involved in the talks told International…

Iraq: China’s Breakthrough

29 August 2008 China this week became the first country since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein to clinch an oil deal with Iraq, by reviving the first of a series of contracts signed by the previous Iraqi regime under new terms dictated by new realities. The service contract for development of the Al-Ahdab field, which includes a mix of old production sharing elements and new service contract terms, sets a…

Iraq-Russia: What Now?

16 July 2001 Using its oil as both weapon and bribe, Iraq — thanks to Russia and some of its Arab neighbors — has thwarted US attempts to revamp the 11-year-old UN sanctions regime, and end Baghdad’s control over oil smuggling. For Washington, which launched the initiative in February as a cornerstone of its Mideast foreign policy, it’s back to the drawing board. A Russian “nyet” to the Anglo-American ideas…