As U.S. and British oil companies sign contracts with the
Iraqi government, is it time to declare Big Oil the "victor" in the
bloody venture?
November 14, 2009 |
Last week, ExxonMobil became the first U.S. oil company
in 35 years to sign an oil-production contract with the government of
Iraq.
As I write, several other contracts with the world’s largest oil
companies are being finalized, and more are expected when a new
negotiating round kicks off in Baghdad on Dec. 11.
Do these contracts represent a "victory" for Big Oil in Iraq? Yes,
but not one as big as the companies had hoped for (at least, not yet).
Before the United States and Britain invaded Iraq in March 2003,
their oil companies were shut out of oil-production contracts being
negotiated by the government of Saddam Hussein. Today, more than six
years of war later, Saddam is gone, and the U.S. and British oil
companies are not only in on the oil contracts, they have managed to
sweeten the terms.
However, organized resistance by Iraqis and people around the world
has thus far succeeded in denying Big Oil its Big Prize: passage of the
Iraq Oil Law, alternatively called Iraq Hydrocarbons Law, which would
grant far greater control over Iraqi oil to foreign companies on terms
much less favorable to Iraq than the current contracts provide.
If the negotiations proceed on their current path, foreign companies
will produce the vast majority of Iraq’s oil. How much control they
will exert, and who will reap the greatest benefits (and endure the
steepest costs) is yet to be determined.
Before the Invasion
In January 2000, 10 days into President George W. Bush’s first term,
representatives of the largest oil and energy companies joined the new
administration to form the Cheney Energy Task Force. As part of its
deliberations, the task force reviewed a series of lists titled "Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield Contracts" naming more than 60 companies from some 30 countries with contracts in various stages of negotiation.
None of contracts were with American nor major British companies,
and none could take effect while the U.N. Security Council sanctions
against Iraq remained in place. Three countries held the largest
contracts: China, Russia and France -- all members of the Security
Council and all in a position to advocate for the end of sanctions.
Were Saddam to remain in power and the sanctions to be removed,
these contracts would take effect, and the U.S. and its closest ally
would be shut out of Iraq’s great oil bonanza.
After the Invasion
The invasion of Iraq dealt handily with the problem of U.S. and
British exclusion. ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP, ConocoPhillips and other
major oil companies met with the Iraqi government on countless
occasions, and the Iraqis tried to make deals.
But the oil companies, backed aggressively by the Bush
administration, steadfastly insisted that contracts would only be
signed after the Iraq Oil Law
was passed. They nearly prevailed on several occasions, but organized
resistance in and outside of Iraq has continually stymied the law’s
passage.
Several forces have conspired to bring the oil companies to the negotiating table today.
Most recently and significantly, Iraq’s Parliament has refused to
even consider the law until after the January 2010 elections. It is
quite likely that a new government hostile to the interests of foreign
(particularly U.S. and British) oil companies could come to power in
those elections, making passage of the law much less likely. The deals
being offered today would be the best the companies would be likely to
get.
President Barack Obama and his administration have been vocal and
active proponents of the law’s passage. However, this administration’s
allegiance to the oil industry is not as steadfast as that of its
predecessor.
The Obama administration’s push for passage of the law comes at the
same time that it pursues withdrawal of all but a residual U.S. troop
presence. It is hard to underestimate the added negotiating weight
brought by 150,000 members of the U.S. (and until very recently
British) military. Bush announced his most public declaration for
passage of the Iraq Oil Law at the same time that he announced the
surge of an additional 20,000 U.S. troops into Iraq. The pending loss
of its most potent negotiating stick has clearly made the oil
companies’ more willing to deal.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton may have best put forward
the administration’s position at the U.S.-Iraq Business and Investment
Conference on Oct. 20, explaining: "A comprehensive hydrocarbon law is
vital for regulating the [Iraq] oil sector. Parliament has delayed this
vote until after January, but steps can be taken in the interim; for
example, by holding transparent, credible auctions on oil and gas
fields as we are seeing ..."
In other words, 'we know you want the law, but Parliament isn’t
biting, and we’re not keeping 150,000 U.S. soldiers in Iraq
indefinitely for you to get it. So, sign the d*** contracts.'
And finally, under immense pressure, the Iraqi Oil Ministry also has steadily been sweetening the deals.
The New Oil Contracts
The Iraq Oil Ministry began a bidding round in June for eight
currently producing oil fields, which are among the largest in the
world. Only one consortium -- BP and the Chinese National Petroleum
Corp. -- agreed to the terms. The rest of the companies balked, saying
the terms just simply were not generous enough. The terms have since
been sweetened (and applied retroactively to BP and CNPC's deal), and
the companies are now jumping on board.
Because the U.S. and British companies have, to a large degree,
squeezed into pre-existing negotiations, some strange bedfellows have
emerged to sign these new contracts, and more odd pairings are expected
soon.
- BP and CNPC finalized the first new oil contract issued by
Baghdad for the largest oil field in the country, the 17 billion
barrel Rumaila field.
- ExxonMobil, with junior partner Royal Dutch Shell, won a
bidding war against Russia’s Lukoil and junior partner ConocoPhillips
for the 8.7 billion barrel West Qurna Phase 1 project.
- Italy's Eni SpA, with California’s Occidental Petroleum and
the Korea Gas Corp., was awarded Iraq's Zubair oil field with
estimated reserves of 4.4 billion barrels.
- Japan's Nippon Corp., leading a consortium of Japanese
companies including Inpex Corp. and JGC Corp., is at an advanced
stage in talks to win the Nassiriyah oil field.
- Shell, with partners CNPC and the Turkish Petroleum Corp., is
also in discussions for the giant Kirkuk oil field, although
negotiations have been delayed until after Iraq’s January elections.
The Terms
These contracts are complex and unique, representing a hybrid of
existing models. They are not the best that the oil companies hoped
for, which would have been production sharing agreements (PSAs). Nor are
they the worst the companies might have feared; Iraq is not
maintaining its nationalized system, closed to foreign oil company
production participation (U.S. and other foreign oil companies sell
Iraqi oil now and have done so for decades).
They are also not technical service contracts (TSCs), although this
is what the Iraqi Oil Ministry has named them (likely in an attempt to
thwart opposition to the contracts for offering too much to foreign oil
companies). Greg Muttitt, an Iraq oil expert with Platform,
told me, "TSCs generally last just a few years, they're generally for a
specific job (e.g. installing pumps) rather than managing a field, and
they go to service companies like Baker Hughes and Halliburton."
On the positive side for the companies, where the development
production contracts (DPC) that Iraq was signing prior to the 2003
invasion offered 12-year contracts, today’s run for 20 to 25 years. And
while as recently as a year ago the Iraqis offered the foreign
companies a 50 percent ownership stake, today’s contracts offer them a
75 percent stake (25 percent for the Iraqi government).
On the other hand, where the PSAs sought under the Iraq Oil Law
would give the companies an equity stake and the ability to book the
oil in the fields as their own, these contracts provide reimbursement
fees for capital and operational expenses and a fixed fee per barrel of
oil produced and deny the companies the ability to book reserves.
It remains unclear whether the foreign companies or the Iraqi
government ultimately has production decision-making authority. And
some of the benefits included in the contracts would be annulled if the
Iraq Oil Law were passed, including requirements to hire and train
Iraqi workers and the transfer of needed technology.
Finally, the Iraqis apparently sweetened the deals
further in the last few weeks by reducing the amount the foreign
companies pay in taxes and allowing them to use private security forces
to protect their facilities.
The Next Bidding Round
On Dec. 11 and 12, the second, much larger, bidding round will be
launched in Baghdad. Forty-four international companies have been
prequalified to bid on run for 11 groups of oil and gas fields in
already producing and undiscovered fields. Negotiations will include
the super giant Majnoon field, which Chevron and France’s Total have
teamed up to bid for.
The contracts for these fields are expected to mirror those
described above, but no "model contract" has been made publicly
available.
Sunlight
The Iraq Oil Law has remained an elusive goal of the world’s most
powerful industry and governments because a massive organized global
resistance movement has been shining a bright spotlight on its content,
its backers, and on the consequences of its passage.
We must continue to shine this spotlight on the new contract
negotiations to help ensure that 1) the military occupation of Iraq
will be able to conclude, and 2) that the Iraqis are not freed from a
foreign military occupation only to be brought under foreign economic
control.
(What these contract negotiations mean for the continued U.S. occupation of Iraq is the topic of my upcoming article for Political Research Associates.)