Thursday, 4 December 2008

Iraqi oil execs bid for sale of the century Iraqi oil

Do I hear a $4bn bid for Basra Gas from Shell? No, that was a no-bid deal, do we have a bid for Rumeilla for BP? Lukoil are on the phone with a bid for West Qurna....the auction begins..


First to put his Chevron-logo-ed foot down against the climate chaos-creating, greenwashing, war profiteering energy companies at Iraq Petroleum 2008 was ChevronBear.
The cuddly but bluesome looking Polar Bear was made/hijacked by Chevron to demonstrate the company's supposed renewable energy credentials.
Chevron is bidding for one of Iraq's largest brownfields - West Qurna in Basra province, and is committed to expanding its portfolio of fossil fuels.

Linda Cook of Shell Exploration and Development, Majid Jawad of Emirati oil company Crescent Petroleum, and BP chief Tony Hayward (below) all jostled for lucrative oil and gas contracts at the Iraq Petroleum 2008 conference.

14 fields were put up for grabs under secret contracts.
Tony Haywood (right) wizened and grumpy because China Petroleum out-bid him ...
The Carbon Town Crier (left) lambasts the Millennium Hotel for holding the pilage event.



Majid Jawad of Crescent Petroleum (above), muses with his mirrored Crescent bidder's paddle (all the better to admire himself in). He left empty-handed despite appeals to Arab identity and Iraqi Unity, underlined with the blatent and urgent desire for Production Sharing Agreement contracts.

Wednesday, 19 November 2008

Sale of the Century - Iraqi oil goes under the hammer


Protest Auction outside Iraq Petroleum Summit December 1st

Tear up the Oil Law, SOFA and Secret Contracts - No Oil for Occupation - Troops and Mercenaries Out Now!



Iraqi Oil Auction Protest
Iraq Petroleum 2008 Conference
9am-11am, Monday 1 December 2008

Millennium Gloucester Hotel & Conference Centre4 -18 Harrington Gardens, London SW7 4LHMap:
http://tinyurl.com/carveupcentral
International Oil executives will bid to control Iraqi oil through a giant secret contract....
Dress in suits if possible...

Despite the Iraqi people rejecting the occupation-pushed Iraqi Oil Law, the Iraqi Ministry of Oil is steaming ahead with 20-year contracts for International Oil Companies to run Iraq's biggest producing fields.

With a combined total of 40 billion barrels, at no point in history has so great a quantity of known oil been offered in a single bid round to international oil companies, in any country.

The largest oil companies in the world will meet for a three day conference to work out contractual conditions for controlling Iraq's giant oil reserves for a generation.

Iraq is an occupation-made humanitarian disaster. 40% of the population relies on contaminated drinking water, over 3 million refugees are living desperate lives in Syria, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon, the death toll from this ongoing war exceeds 1 million lives and Iraqi civilians continue to be bombed in their homes, marketplaces and streets by both occupation and terror group attacks.

Iraqis are saying NO to both the occupation and the oil privatisation it is pushing.

Come and show solidarity with the people of Iraq resisting oil grab and occupation and show the likes of Shell, BP, Exxon and the rest that Iraq's oil belongs to the Iraqi people.

Monday, 13 October 2008

Giant Cheney rampages through London...

The US Vice President famously said 'the Middle East with two thirds of the world’s oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies'. Iraq is this 'prize'. With the third largest reserves in the world and extraction costs of approx $1.50 per barrel, it has arguably the largest conventional 'easy' oil left for oil companies to target.

100's of protesters joined the Hands Off Iraqi Oil demonstration on Saturday October 11th in Central London. Visiting the HQs of corporate pirates Shell and BP, Iraqi oil workers resisted the rip off of their resources, keeping them out of the grip of a 12ft effigy of the Oil Industry enmeshed Dick Cheney and the occupation he represents...

l Photo by Terrence Bunch

The Prize.....

Photo by Anthony Bailey

The Oil Grab!



Photo by Anthony Bailey

Photo Anthony Bailey

Cheney and Shell - both have their sights set on Iraqi oil...



But the Iraqi people, with Iraqi oil workers on the frontline, are resisting the corporate take-over of their resources..

Cheney begins his chase for oil in the shadow of Shell...


Photo Terrence Bunch

Onward to BP's HQ he goes....
Photo Anthony Bailey

...Where the story of the occupation and oil grab is told, the millions killed by dictatorship, sanctions and war remembered, and the resiliance and resistance of the Iraqi people is celebrated..

Photo Anthony Bailey

Samba beats of resistance on Regent's Street..


Photo Anthony Bailey

Still out of reach on Maddox Street....

Photo Terrence Bunch


Photo Terrence Bunch

Cheney Hangs his head in Shame as Iraqi exile Salih Ibrahim denounces the economic system and industry that has been fueling war in his country, cheapening the lives of millions and destroying the ecology of the planet.


Photo Terrence Bunch

The Veep is beaten with the Iraqi flag...

Photo Terrence Bunch

Iraqi oil workers bring Cheney to his knees..


Photo Anthony Bailey

He and the neo-conservative ideologies, economic system&agendas he represents are toppled! With an Iraqi 'zaghroodi' call of celebration ringing high above the embassy.....

Watch this space for more HOIO actions to come

Saturday, 27 September 2008

100 days countdown - Hands Off Iraqi Oil national action in London - join us!


100 days til the end of the Bush and Cheney administration....

Join us for a Hands Off Iraqi Oil demonstration through central London on Saturday 11 October. Featuring a team of oil law resisters escorting a giant Dick Cheney from Shell's UK headquarters via the BP HQ to the US Embassy in Grosvenor Square.

Assemble 12 noon, Shell House, Waterloo, London SE1 7NA (Opposite Waterloo train station. Nearest tube: Waterloo). Click here for more

Protest Big Oil´s carve-up Meeting in London.......

Monday 13th will see Iraqi Oil Minister Hussein al Shahristani meet with Big Oil in London to discuss longterm deals for controling Iraqi oil.

41 international oil companies including Shell, BP and Exxon, which have pre-qualified for bids on existing producing oil and gas fields will attend.

The meeting is thought to be an interim replacement for a major oil and gas event which had been schedueled to take place in Baghdad in October. This event has now been postponed until December.

The London meeting will mark a crucial step forward in making privatisation of Iraqi oil a long-term reality.

According to Oil Ministry spokesperson Assim Jihad 'The oil ministry will unveil the legal framework and conditions for signing service contracts by qualified oil companies,'

Yet the proposed risk-service deals reported to be on the table could last 20 years and are thought to be close to the Production Sharing Agreements model.

PSAs are reserves-granting contracts which hand control over oil reserves to companies. Iraqi oil experts, trade unions, MPs and civil society have condemned the contracts as a form of economic occupation and a violation of any future potential Iraqi sovereignty.

The situation in Iraq is far from fair or normal for any long-term deals to be negotiated let alone signed.

Over one million people have died since the beginning of the war and occupation.
Millions are dispalced by occupation-stoked sectarian violence. Occupation forces and mercenaries continue to kill and main with impunity, thousands suffer in prison camps, indiscriminate aerial attacks and curfews terrorize thousands.
Profound injustice, disempowerment, poverty and distress dominate the daily lives of most people living in occupied Iraq.

The oil law, which was first drafted in consultation with the UK and US governments, oil majors such as Shell and BP and the IMF is still off the statute books. Its passage in its' current form threatens to escalate and perpetuate the occupation and sectarian violence.

Its' enactment could re-draw the map of Iraq
through allowing regions to control their own oil industries, sign contracts with majors without democratic oversight and economically empower their already occupation supported political and military power structures.

Passage of the oil law and the signing of longterm privatisation deals in Iraq will escalate conflict, entrench the occupation and increase the number of paramilitary and mercenary forces in the beleagured country.

The stakes could not be higher for the future of Iraq´s economy, independence, stability and unity. This is why the law is still off the statute books and Iraqis up and down the country continue to oppose it.

Thwarting the economic and geo-political aims of the neo-conservative right which are profiting from the war on Iraq, such as the US oil lobby and its´ man in the whitehouse Dick Cheney should be at the forefront of the anti-war movement.

The Bush-Cheney administration and its' allies in the oil industry and are not giving up, neither are the people of Iraq and neither should we.

It is vital for the anti war movement, social justice movements and the trade union movement to come out into the streets on saturday. We need to show our solidarity with the Iraqi people in resisting the rip off of their resources and the ongoing occupation - military and economic - of Iraq.

Join us on the streets of London on October 11th in telling Shell, BP and the others, Hands Off Iraqi Oil - End the Occupation Now!

Saturday, 20 September 2008

Technical Service Contracts cancelled, what next?

Q&A Update
Technical Service Contracts cancelled by Iraqi government – what next?
Briefly, the recent cancellation of the TSAs or TSCs – originally part-written by the US state department and international oil companies - is evidence of the progress the Iraqi and international campaign has made, and how much there is still left to play for.

The oil law is now unlikely to be passed before Bush and Cheney leave office. The Iraqi Oil Minister Hussein Shahristani himself admits there is no prospect for the foreseeable future.

The Chinese development contracts for the al-Ahdab deal near Baghdad as well as the gas capture contract for Shell are likely to be signed soon.

The details of the contracts have not been released to the parliament, nor have they been subject of public scrutiny or debate. However they could be signed soon. Oil experts and civil society leaders in Iraq continue to call for an open debate and transparency and consultation with all Iraqi resource deals.

While some have claimed the fact that the first major contract has gone to a Chinese company as evidence that the US/UK occupation is not pursuing its own oil interests, it should be noted that al-Ahdab is a small field by Iraqi standards - about a billion barrels. For the 8 much larger fields available in the bidding round (collectively more than 40 billion barrels), it is indeed the US and European companies that are the front-runners.

So why weren’t the Technical Service Contracts not signed?

Essentially, the reason for the collapse of these negotiations (after nearly a year) was that the western oil companies were so greedy. They weren't interested in the contracts in their own right (they're only 1-year service contracts), but in what they could give them beyond. So they were insisting on long-term extension rights, giving them first refusal on subsequent longer contracts - something the Iraqi government resisted. But the companies were too greedy and have now missed out altogether, so will have to wait for the bidding round.

Why has the Iraqi Ministry of Oil taken this position?
That the Oil Ministry was prepared to stand up to the companies is due to the shift in the politics of the oil issue. Eighteen months ago, oil policy in Iraq was consistently reflecting the interests of the western companies and governments - it was due to the popular campaign in Iraq that the Oil Ministry felt able to (and needed to) push a firmer line.

So what happens next?
Other contracts are proceeding. A bidding round is about to be launched for 8 large oilfields (roughly the same ones that would have been covered by these no-bid contracts), and then there is the contract agreed recently with Chinese companies for the al-Ahdab field and with Shell for gas development for the domestic and export market. All of those are long-term contracts (reportedly 20 years).

What kind of contracts are these long term ‘development’ contracts?

According to the Ministry's claims, they are service contracts. If that is true, they would be comparable at least to contracts in Venezuela and Iran, rather than giving such a large share of ownership, control and revenues as the production sharing contracts the companies wanted; but still giving away more than in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, where foreign companies do not manage a whole field, but are just contracted to install a piece of technology, for example.

How do we know that these contracts won’t just be Production Sharing Agreements of privatisation deals by another name?
It is hard to say because so far there has been absolutely no transparency, and no-one knows what the terms of the contracts are. The priority now in Iraq has to be for these terms to be disclosed - the issues are too important to be decided in secret.

How can the companies start work in Iraq when the oil law is still not passed?

The legal position in Iraq is that limited contracts (like in Saudi Arabia) can be signed without an oil law, but extensive ones (like production sharing contracts) can't. These contracts currently being considered are in a grey area in between. To know the answer, we would have to see the precise terms of the contracts, and take legal advice.

Friday, 29 August 2008

100 Days to stop Bush and Cheney - Sat 11 Oct

George W Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney are putting immense pressure on the Iraqi government to pass a controversial oil law before they leave office. Iraqi trade unionists are fighting the law, which would effectively hand over Iraq’s oil to foreign companies such as BP and Shell for a generation.

Join the Hands Off Iraqi Oil procession through London on Saturday 11 October to launch 100 days of action to stop Bush and Cheney. Come and help a team of Oil Law resisters lasso a giant Dick Cheney and keep him away from a barrel of Iraq’s oil. There will be a samba band banging (oil) drums and corporate pirates too!

Date:
Saturday 11 October 2008

Time:

12 noon

Assemble:

Shell House, SE1 7NA (Opposite Waterloo train station. Nearest tube: Waterloo)

Route:

Through central London: Shell House - BP HQ - Grosvenor Sq. Photo opps @ every stop of the tour

Saturday, 23 August 2008

Speaker tour: Sept–Oct 2008

In September and October Hands Off Iraqi Oil speakers are touring the country talking to local groups about the latest we can do to stop the Oil Law and support Iraqi oil workers.

The speaking tour aims to explore:

- After five years of war and occupation, what are the current tactics of foreign oil companies with regards to Iraqi oil? What is the role of the British and US governments in furthering a corporate agenda in Iraq?
- How have Iraqis, particularly Iraqi workers, responded to this agenda?
- What is the Iraqi Hydrocarbon Law and what impact will it have, if passed, on sectarianism and the entrenchment of the occupation in Iraq?
- What can we do to fight against these agendas here in the UK?
- How can we take action/support Iraqi civil society?

TO INVITE A SPEAKER: email handsoffiraqioil@gmail.com or call 0845 458 2564.

Please let us know:

* which group you are from
* the likely size of the meeting etc. the bigger the better!
* any date preferences / dates to avoid
* your e-mail and phone number

Deadline for invitations: 6pm, Friday 3 October 2008

Speakers include:

Greg Muttitt is co-director of PLATFORM and author of Crude Designs: The Rip-off of Iraq's Oil Wealth (www.crudedesigns.org), and is one of the world's leading experts on oil and Iraq

Ewa Jasiewicz is a human rights activist, and journalist. Ewa spent 9 months living in occupied Iraq and working with Iraqi oil workers.

***Campaign materials***: You can download Hands Off Iraqi Oil campaign materials - including the flyer for the 100 days action, a factsheet on Shell's attempts to influence the oil law, a leaflet to hand out outside Shell garages, a model union motion and a window poster and much more - from the right hand side of this page or email handsoffiraqioil@gmail.com to order materials by post.

Friday, 25 July 2008

Video of Naomi Klein speech at Hands Off Iraqi Oil fundraiser


Naomi Klein speaks in London from Bonobo Films on Vimeo.

Thursday, 17 July 2008

Analysis of Iraq's new oil deals

Iraq’s oil wealth on the block

The real implications of last week’s Oil Ministry announcement

By Greg Muttitt, Co-Director of PLATFORM

Published on niqash.org, 9 July 2008
Available in English, Arabic and Kurdish at http://www.niqash.org/content.php?contentTypeID=171&id=2243&lang=1

Last week saw the biggest step so far towards transferring Iraqi oil into the hands of foreign multinational companies, sparking renewed accusations that the US-UK war on Iraq was really motivated by an oil grab.

The Oil Ministry announced on 30 June that foreign oil companies would be invited to bid for contracts to develop six of Iraq’s largest oilfields, which together contain around half of the country’s known oil reserves.

Yet most commentators missed the significance of the move – that it would give away more to foreign companies than had been planned at any point since the Constitution was written in 2005, and possibly more than any major oil producer has given since the colonial era.

The contracts were (with one exception) for the second stage of development of the oilfields, to come after the one- or two-year no-bid contracts that the Ministry has been privately negotiating with Shell, BP, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Total and four smaller companies. The Ministry had also intended to sign those last week, but has delayed signing to some time this month.

To understand what’s at stake, we need to take a short diversion into some oil industry contract terminology. Last week’s announcement was of longer-term “risk service contracts” (RSCs), a kind of half-way house in the range of contract types.

The shorter (no-bid) contracts that would come first are known as “technical service contracts” (TSCs), where companies simply act as contractors to a government client who calls the shots, for a fixed fee – albeit with some strange features that I described in my last article for niqash.

These are contrasted with what the companies really want in Iraq – the dreaded “production sharing agreements” (PSAs), which would give them control over the fields, a large share of the oil extracted, and the potential for huge profits.

Last week’s RSCs are somewhere between TSCs and PSAs. It’s a model that has been used in Latin America, and is very similar to the “buyback contracts” used in Iran. The foreign company invests the capital (like in a PSA), but rather than getting a share of the oil, it gets a specified rate of return on its investment (say, 15%). And after a number of years, the oilfield reverts to national control. The government has not released the details of the contracts; but it appears they would be for either 7 or 9 years (in contrast to 22 years for a PSA or 1-2 years for a TSC).[1]

The Oil Minister made much of the fact that he was not offering PSAs – to reassure Iraqis that they need not fear a great giveaway.

But that the contracts were not PSAs misses the point. All six of the fields – Rumaila, Kirkuk, West Qurna, Zubair, Maysan and Bai Hasan – are already producing oil, and actually together account for more than 90% of Iraq’s current production. As such, their investment and technology needs are relatively minor, and could easily be provided within the public sector, as they have been for more than 30 years.

Ever since the Constitution was written in 2005, Iraqi oil policy has been that fields already producing oil would stay in Iraqi hands – and that only for new, undeveloped fields would development contracts be offered to foreign companies. Even the draft Oil Law – which has been so controversial for giving away too much – required that fields already producing oil would be “managed and operated” by the Iraq National Oil Company (INOC).

That policy was reversed last week – giving the “backbone of Iraq’s oil production” (in the Minister’s own words) also to foreign companies – fields that were never going to be on offer in any form. It remains to be seen what happens to new fields.

The positive portrayal of a negative step was repeated when the Minister also emphasised that companies would have to “give” at least a 25% stake in each project to INOC. But this was never the companies’ to give – in fact, the true implication of the announcement is that they may take 75% away from INOC.

Even for new fields, a 25% INOC stake would have been derisory. Libya, for instance, requires a public stake of around 80% for new exploration contracts (and for much smaller fields than Iraq’s). Nigeria, which is seen as one of the OPEC members most friendly to western companies, requires that the Nigeria National Petroleum Company take a 55% stake in onshore projects.

It was in the 1950s, as the colonial era was coming to a close, that a minimum of 51% became the norm in major oil producers. Now Iraq appears to be stepping back to the age of subjugation to the interests of foreign powers. Hardly the progressive move the Minister claimed.

For the most part, the international media were willing to accept the spin about how Iraq would get a great deal – some reports even celebrated how the companies were charitably “helping” Iraq rebuild its oil sector. The coverage clearly signified how far the Iraqi oil debate has been twisted over the last five years.

Iraqi oil policy, and mainstream discussion of it, have rested on two assumptions: that Iraq’s oil can only be effectively developed by the western oil majors, and that the contracts offered have to provide for the companies’ needs (or sometimes the oil market’s needs) first and foremost. Consistently absent has been any conception of what is in the best interests of the Iraqi people.

The big question is why the Oil Ministry would want to bring in the multinationals for these fields. The Ministry is not short of cash: in fact, it has been consistently unable to spend the funds provided to it, so is now sitting on billions of dollars that could be invested in the fields. And technology can easily be purchased, whilst Iraqis maintained the management of the fields.

The true explanation seems almost too obvious for most commentators to spot. One radio interviewer asked me “Why shouldn’t the Iraqi government sign these contracts if it wants to? – it’s not as if someone’s holding a gun to their head”.

In fact, that is exactly what is being held to Iraqis’ heads. Or more precisely, over 150,000 guns.

The Iraqi government owes its very existence to the foreign troops that remain in the country. And with the occupiers playing a greater role than the Iraqi electorate in whether the government stands or falls, it is inevitable that the government will respond more to the views of the former.

Last week, the New York Times revealed that US advisers had helped shape the new contracts. The State Department responded that its advice was purely technical, and gave the example of helping draft arbitration clauses. Those clauses, which determine how the contracts will be adjudicated outside the country by secretive investment courts, would probably be seen by most Iraqis as rather more than a technical issue. But for the USA, for multinational companies to run the industry is simply a natural way of doing things.

State Department spokesman Tom Casey added that the US role is similar to that of a lawyer helping a client draw up a will. It was an apt analogy. The USA sees Iraq’s economy as in its dying throes, and is helping the Iraqi government decide how much of its estate to bequeath to BP, Shell or Exxon.

But all is not yet lost for advocates of Iraqi sovereignty over its oil. Companies are not to bid for the contracts until next March, and signing is not expected until summer 2009 – giving plenty of time for the policy to change. During this time, the political landscape will alter significantly following the departure of the Bush/Cheney administration.

And the so-far successful Iraqi campaign against oil privatisation continues to make progress. According to press reports, the Oil Minister has finally agreed to open the technical service contracts to parliamentary scrutiny before they are signed. This is a welcome move, although it needs to be extended: all Iraqis should have a right to know what is being done to their natural resources.

For the US administration, it might seem like a dangerously radical idea to let Iraqis decide the future of their oil. But with Cheney and Bush on their way out, there may even be a prospect that the idea will take hold.

Greg Muttitt is an expert on Iraqi oil policy, which he has been studying since the start of the occupation in 2003. Working for the independent British charity PLATFORM, he has argued throughout that decisions about the future of Iraq’s oil should be made by the Iraqi people, free from external pressure.

Tuesday, 1 July 2008

U.S. Advised Iraqi Ministry on Oil Deals

New York Times, 30 June 2008
by Andrew E. Kramer

A group of American advisers led by a small State Department team played an integral part in drawing up contracts between the Iraqi government and five major Western oil companies to develop some of the largest fields in Iraq, American officials say.

The disclosure, coming on the eve of the contracts’ announcement, is the first confirmation of direct involvement by the Bush administration in deals to open Iraq’s oil to commercial development and is likely to stoke criticism.

In their role as advisers to the Iraqi Oil Ministry, American government lawyers and private-sector consultants provided template contracts and detailed suggestions on drafting the contracts, advisers and a senior State Department official said.

Full story