Iraqi Cabinet OKs Deals With Majors

5 March 2008 The Iraqi cabinet has given the oil ministry the go-ahead to sign technical support contracts to develop five producing fields with five of the world’s top oil firms, Iraqi sources told International Oil Daily Tuesday. The companies — BP, Chevron with partner Total, Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell — have now been invited to a new round of talks in Amman, Jordan, starting on Mar. 14….

Minnows Complain as Majors Meet on Iraq

18 January 2008 Iraq’s launch last week of a prequalification process for international oil companies ahead of a tender for undeveloped fields has drawn fire from smaller firms, which say the criteria and requirements set by the oil ministry exclude them from the competition and favor their bigger brethren, especially the majors. Oil ministry sources said the prequalification process is designed to determine “which companies could be called on to…

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: Paralysis At The Top

8 August 2008 More than nine months after they were first launched, Iraq’s technical support contracts (TSC) — the first commercial agreements with Big Oil since nationalization in the 1970s — are in limbo. The official view from Baghdad is that the short-term deals are losing their relevance due to protracted negotiations and the possibility that they will overlap with the award of long-term service contracts under the recently launched…