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View Full Version : Iraq oil output may hit 8mb/d by 2017



dbcooper
11-30-2010, 12:32 PM
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The Peninsula - 30 November, 2010

Iraq could more than triple oil output by 2017, a senior advisor to its prime minister said yesterday, effectively cutting previous estimates but giving a figure that would still make Iraq one of the world’s top producers.

Iraq has signed deals with international oil companies following auctions last year that could in theory take capacity to 12 million barrels per day (b/d) by 2017 — a figure that most analysts view as unrealistic.

“I expect we will reach a capacity of 8 million barrels per day within the next six-seven years,” Thamir Ghadhban, who served as oil minister after the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and now advises Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki on oil, told a conference yesterday.

Analysts have cited undeveloped infrastructure and security concerns as the key obstacles preventing Iraq from reaching output of 12mb/d — which would make it the world’s largest oil nation or put it on a par with current leader Saudi Arabia.

The country, which sits on some of the world’s largest oil reserves, has struggled in the past years to push its output even close to the 3mb/d it saw in the late 1980s before it invaded Kuwait and saw a US military retaliation.

A Reuters poll suggested last month Iraq’s crude oil output would rise to 2.8mb/d by 2011 from roughly 2.5mb/d now and reach only 4.6mb/d by 2015.

Current Oil Minister Hussain Al Shahristani has said he expects four million barrels per day in three years’ time and that there is no need for Iraq — for now the only member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries exempt from its system of output curbs — to have a production target until then.

Government spokesman Ali Al Dabbagh told reporters that Iraq’s output would be boosted by crude from its semi-autonomous Kurdistan region from January next year.

Producers in Kurdistan, including Norway’s DNO, stand ready to export over 100,000b/d at short notice, industry executives say, but so far a dispute between Baghdad and the region’s government has prevented this, except for a short period in 2009.

Shahristani has described contracts the regional government signed with foreign companies as illegal but Dabbagh told reporters a deal was under discussion.

“Part of smoothing the relation with Kurdistan is that these contracts need to be legitimised and we want to find a formula which makes this workable within Iraqi prevailing law, keeping the sovereignty of the federal government so that they have a hand with the region to manage the new oil fields,” he said.

“I don’t think it will be difficult,” he added.

Last week, Iraq’s president formally asked Maliki, leader of a Shia bloc, to form a new government, after he secured support from some Sunni Arab leaders and the Kurds.

Iraq’s 2011 production target of 2.3mb/d assumes Kurdish production of 150,000, Dabbagh said.

If the region doesn’t reach this level, it will face penalties in the form of deductions, on a proportional basis, from the 17 percent of total oil revenues which the region is allocated by the central government.

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