Kurdish-Iraqi Oil Minister Spat Escalates

1 May 2007 A war of words between Iraqi Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani and Kurdish Energy Minister Ashti Hawrami over who has the authority to sign contracts with foreign companies, and over the extent of the proposed new Iraqi national oil company’s control over the country’s oil fields, is threatening to derail the draft oil law approved by the Iraqi cabinet in February. Al-Shahristani last week warned foreign companies that…

Iraqi Oil Law Still Awaits Kurds’ Approval

28 June 2007 Iraq’s draft petroleum law is still awaiting the go-ahead from Kurdish officials following changes to the text introduced by the state Shura Council, a panel of judges tasked with reviewing the legal language of the draft, a senior Iraqi government official said Wednesday. “We have sent the draft to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and we are waiting for their comments on the changes in the language…

Iraqi Parties Revive Older Hydrocarbon Law

5 September 2007 The Iraqi cabinet has withdrawn a draft hydrocarbon law it sent to parliament in July after it failed to muster enough support from lawmakers to approve it. The cabinet has instead reverted to an older version endorsed by the council of ministers in February which it hopes will be backed by five parties when it’s put to a vote before the end of the year, a senior…

Oil Chaos

2 March 2007 Iraq’s draft petroleum law, approved by the cabinet this week, claims to be fair, clear, transparent and efficient. It’s anything but. The bill, which has to be approved by parliament before coming into force, emerged after a series of compromises — and US pressure — aimed at overcoming Kurdish opposition to any form of centralized power. The result is to enhance the country’s division along ethnic lines…