Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A18841-2002Sep14
In Iraqi War Scenario, Oil Is Key Issue U.S.
Drillers Eye Huge Petroleum Pool
By Dan Morgan and David B. Ottaway
Washington Post Staff Writers Sunday, September 15, 2002; Page A01
A U.S.-led ouster of Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein could open a bonanza for American oil companies long banished from
Iraq, scuttling oil deals between Baghdad and Russia, France and other
countries, and reshuffling world petroleum markets, according to industry
officials and leaders of the Iraqi opposition.
Although senior Bush administration
officials say they have not begun to focus on the issues involving oil and
Iraq, American and foreign oil companies have already begun maneuvering
for a stake in the country's huge proven reserves of 112 billion barrels
of crude oil, the largest in the world outside Saudi Arabia.
The importance of Iraq's oil has made it
potentially one of the administration's biggest bargaining chips in
negotiations to win backing from the U.N. Security Council and Western
allies for President Bush's call for tough international action against
Hussein. All five permanent members of the Security Council -- the United
States, Britain, France, Russia and China -- have international oil
companies with major stakes in a change of leadership in Baghdad.
"It's pretty straightforward,"
said former CIA director R. James Woolsey, who has been one of the leading
advocates of forcing Hussein from power. "France and Russia have oil
companies and interests in Iraq. They should be told that if they are of
assistance in moving Iraq toward decent government, we'll do the best we
can to ensure that the new government and American companies work closely
with them."
But he added: "If they throw in their
lot with Saddam, it will be difficult to the point of impossible to
persuade the new Iraqi government to work with them."
Indeed, the mere prospect of a new Iraqi
government has fanned concerns by non-American oil companies that they
will be excluded by the United States, which almost certainly would be the
dominant foreign power in Iraq in the aftermath of Hussein's fall.
Representatives of many foreign oil concerns have been meeting with
leaders of the Iraqi opposition to make their case for a future stake and
to sound them out about their intentions.
Since the Persian Gulf War in 1991,
companies from more than a dozen nations, including France, Russia, China,
India, Italy, Vietnam and Algeria, have either reached or sought to reach
agreements in principle to develop Iraqi oil fields, refurbish existing
facilities or explore undeveloped tracts. Most of the deals are on hold
until the lifting of U.N. sanctions.
But Iraqi opposition officials made clear
in interviews last week that they will not be bound by any of the deals.
"We will review all these agreements,
definitely," said Faisal Qaragholi, a petroleum engineer who directs
the London office of the Iraqi National Congress (INC), an umbrella
organization of opposition groups that is backed by the United States.
"Our oil policies should be decided by a government in Iraq elected
by the people."
Ahmed Chalabi, the INC leader, went even
further, saying he favored the creation of a U.S.-led consortium to
develop Iraq's oil fields, which have deteriorated under more than a
decade of sanctions. "American companies will have a big shot at
Iraqi oil," Chalabi said.
The INC, however, said it has not taken a
formal position on the structure of Iraq's oil industry in event of a
change of leadership.
While the Bush administration's campaign
against Hussein is presenting vast possibilities for multinational oil
giants, it poses major risks and uncertainties for the global oil market,
according to industry analysts.
Access to Iraqi oil and profits will depend
on the nature and intentions of a new government. Whether Iraq remains a
member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, for example,
or seeks an independent role, free of the OPEC cartel's quotas, will have
an impact on oil prices and the flow of investments to competitors such as
Russia, Venezuela and Angola.
While Russian oil companies such as Lukoil
have a major financial interest in developing Iraqi fields, the low prices
that could result from a flood of Iraqi oil into world markets could set
back Russian government efforts to attract foreign investment in its
untapped domestic fields. That is because low world oil prices could make
costly ventures to unlock Siberia's oil treasures far less appealing.
Bush and Vice President Cheney have worked
in the oil business and have long-standing ties to the industry. But
despite the buzz about the future of Iraqi oil among oil companies, the
administration, preoccupied with military planning and making the case
about Hussein's potential threat, has yet to take up the issue in a
substantive way, according to U.S. officials.
The Future of Iraq Group, a task force set
up at the State Department, does not have oil on its list of issues, a
department spokesman said last week. An official with the National
Security Council declined to say whether oil had been discussed during
consultations on Iraq that Bush has had over the past several weeks with
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Western leaders.
On Friday, a State Department delegation
concluded a three-day visit to Moscow in connection with Iraq. In early
October, U.S. and Russian officials are to hold an energy summit in
Houston, at which more than 100 Russian and American energy companies are
expected.
Rep. Curt Weldon (R-Pa.) said Bush is
keenly aware of Russia's economic interests in Iraq, stemming from a $7
billion to $8 billion debt that Iraq ran up with Moscow before the Gulf
War. Weldon, who has cultivated close ties to Putin and Russian
parliamentarians, said he believed the Russian leader will support U.S.
action in Iraq if he can get private assurances from Bush that Russia
"will be made whole" financially.
Officials of the Iraqi National Congress
said last week that the INC's Washington director, Entifadh K. Qanbar, met
with Russian Embassy officials here last month and urged Moscow to begin a
dialogue with opponents of Hussein's government.
But even with such groundwork, the chances
of a tidy transition in the oil sector appear highly problematic. Rival
ethnic groups in Iraq's north are already squabbling over the the giant
Kirkuk oil field, which Arabs, Kurds and minority Turkmen tribesmen are
eyeing in the event of Hussein's fall.
Although the volumes have dwindled in
recent months, the United States was importing nearly 1 million barrels of
Iraqi oil a day at the start of the year. Even so, American oil companies
have been banished from direct involvement in Iraq since the late 1980s,
when relations soured between Washington and Baghdad.
Hussein in the 1990s turned to non-American
companies to repair fields damaged in the Gulf War and Iraq's earlier war
against Iran, and to tap undeveloped reserves, but U.S. government studies
say the results have been disappointing.
While Russia's Lukoil negotiated a $4
billion deal in 1997 to develop the 15-billion-barrel West Qurna field in
southern Iraq, Lukoil had not commenced work because of U.N. sanctions.
Iraq has threatened to void the agreement unless work began immediately.
Last October, the Russian oil services
company Slavneft reportedly signed a $52 million service contract to drill
at the Tuba field, also in southern Iraq. A proposed $40 billion
Iraqi-Russian economic agreement also reportedly includes opportunities
for Russian companies to explore for oil in Iraq's western desert.
The French company Total Fina Elf has
negotiated for rights to develop the huge Majnoon field, near the Iranian
border, which may contain up to 30 billion barrels of oil. But in July
2001, Iraq announced it would no longer give French firms priority in the
award of such contracts because of its decision to abide by the sanctions.
Officials of several major firms said they
were taking care to avoiding playing any role in the debate in Washington
over how to proceed on Iraq. "There's no real upside for American oil
companies to take a very aggressive stance at this stage. There'll be
plenty of time in the future," said James Lucier, an oil analyst with
Prudential Securities.
But with the end of sanctions that likely
would come with Hussein's ouster, companies such as ExxonMobil and
ChevronTexaco would almost assuredly play a role, industry officials said.
"There's not an oil company out there that wouldn't be interested in
Iraq," one analyst said.
Staff writer Ken Bredemeier contributed to
this report.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company