Iraq Oil Almanac An OpenOil Reference Guide 1 Table of Contents Preface......................................................................................................6 Energy Industry Background......................................................................8 Iraqi Hydrocarbon Reserves.....................................................................8 Definition of Reserves............................................................................12 Dependency on Oil Revenues.................................................................13 Energy Governance Weak Points............................................................14 Oil theft...................................................................................................17 Regulatory Framework..............................................................................21 Ministry of Oil (Iraq)..............................................................................21 Ministry of Finance (Iraq)......................................................................23 Central Bank of Iraq...............................................................................24 Draft Laws Concerning Hydrocarbons in Iraq.......................................27 Treatment of Oil in Iraq's 2005 Constitution..........................................30 KRG Contract Disputes..........................................................................32 Federal Oil and Gas Council...................................................................34 Iraq National Oil Company Law............................................................37 Revenue Sharing Procedures..................................................................38 Middle East Comparisons.......................................................................40 Iraq's First Licensing Round (2009).......................................................46 Iraq's Second Licensing Round (2009)...................................................49 Iraq's Third Licensing Round (2010)......................................................53 Iraq's Fourth Licensing Round (2012)....................................................56 Historical Overview....................................................................................60 Iraq National Oil Company....................................................................60 Iraq Petroleum Company........................................................................62 Iraqi Oil Nationalisation.........................................................................65 Oil Industry post-Saddam.......................................................................67 Iraqi Membership of OPEC....................................................................71 Impact of Wars and Sanctions................................................................74 Federalism, Factionalism and Regional Differences..............................79 Regional Dynamics.....................................................................................85 Iran-Iraq..................................................................................................85 Saudi Arabia-Iraq....................................................................................88 Kuwait-Iraq.............................................................................................94 Turkey-Iraq.............................................................................................97 International Entities...............................................................................101 2 Firms with Contracts with Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG)...101 BP.........................................................................................................102 BP Operations in Iraq...........................................................................105 CNOOC................................................................................................106 CNOOC Operations in Iraq..................................................................109 China National Petroleum Corporation................................................110 CNPC Operations in Iraq......................................................................113 DNO......................................................................................................114 DNO Operations in Iraq........................................................................117 Eni.........................................................................................................118 Eni Operations in Iraq...........................................................................120 ExxonMobil..........................................................................................122 ExxonMobil Operations in Iraq............................................................125 Genel Energy........................................................................................128 Genel Operations in Iraq.......................................................................130 Heritage.................................................................................................131 Heritage Operations in Iraq..................................................................133 Hunt......................................................................................................134 Hunt Operations in Iraq........................................................................136 Japex (Japan Petroleum Exploration Company Limited).....................137 Japex Operations in Iraq.......................................................................140 KazMunayGas......................................................................................141 KazMunayGas Operations in Iraq........................................................144 Kogas (Korea Gas Corporation)...........................................................145 Kogas Operations in Iraq......................................................................147 Kuwait Energy Company.....................................................................150 Kuwait Energy Company Operations in Iraq.......................................152 Gazprom...............................................................................................153 Gazprom Operations in Iraq.................................................................156 Lukoil....................................................................................................157 Lukoil Operations in Iraq......................................................................160 Marathon...............................................................................................161 Marathon Operations in Iraq.................................................................164 Occidental.............................................................................................165 Occidental Operations in Iraq...............................................................167 Petronas.................................................................................................168 Petronas Operations in Iraq..................................................................170 Shell......................................................................................................171 Shell Operations in Iraq........................................................................174 3 Sonangol...............................................................................................176 Sonangol Operations in Iraq.................................................................178 Statoil....................................................................................................179 Statoil Operations in Iraq......................................................................182 Talisman Energy...................................................................................183 Talisman Energy Operations in Iraq.....................................................185 Total S.A...............................................................................................186 Total Operations in Iraq........................................................................189 TPAO (Türkiye Petrolleri Anonim Ortaklığı).......................................190 TPAO Operations in Iraq......................................................................193 Iraqi Entities.............................................................................................196 State Oil Marketing Organization.........................................................196 Petroleum Contracts and Licensing Directorate...................................197 Prime Minister's Office.........................................................................199 Maysan Oil Company...........................................................................201 North Oil Company (Iraq)....................................................................203 South Oil Company (Iraq)....................................................................204 Iraq Drilling Company..........................................................................206 Other Iraqi Entities...............................................................................207 Secondary Iraqi Entities........................................................................210 KRG Institutions...................................................................................213 Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions..............................................................215 Key Infrastructure...................................................................................219 Baiji Refinery........................................................................................219 Basra Refinery......................................................................................220 Daura Refinery......................................................................................221 Samawa Refinery..................................................................................222 Khor al-Amaya Terminal......................................................................223 Basra Oil Terminal................................................................................224 Kirkuk-Banias Pipeline.........................................................................225 Iraq Pipeline Through Saudi Arabia (IPSA).........................................227 Kirkuk-Ceyhan Oil Pipeline.................................................................228 South Gas Utilisation Project................................................................230 Environmental Impacts.........................................................................232 Oil and Gas Fields....................................................................................238 Ahdab (Field)........................................................................................238 Badra (Field).........................................................................................240 Kirkuk (Field).......................................................................................242 Majnoon (Field)....................................................................................245 4 Rumaila (Field).....................................................................................247 East Baghdad (Field)............................................................................250 Nahr Umr (Field)..................................................................................252 Najmah (Field)......................................................................................254 West Qurna Phase 1 (Field)..................................................................255 West Qurna Phase 2 (Field)..................................................................258 Qayara (Field).......................................................................................261 Zubair (Field)........................................................................................262 Nasiriya (Field).....................................................................................265 Bai Hassan (Field)................................................................................266 Eastern Fields (Field)............................................................................267 Siba (Field)...........................................................................................269 Akkas (Field)........................................................................................270 Mansuriya (Field).................................................................................272 Middle Furat (Field).............................................................................274 Maysan (Field)......................................................................................275 Garraf (Field)........................................................................................277 Halfaya (Field)......................................................................................278 Resource Transparency Opportunities...................................................281 Resource Curse.....................................................................................281 Natural Resource Charter.....................................................................285 Resource Transparency Movement.......................................................288 Resource Transparency Movement in Iraq...........................................289 EITI.......................................................................................................291 EITI in Iraq...........................................................................................295 Global Witness......................................................................................299 Revenue Watch Institute.......................................................................301 Transparency International...................................................................303 Transparency of Global Oil Companies (TI Report)............................304 TI Report: Grades of Companies in Iraq..............................................306 Publish What You Pay..........................................................................307 Directory of Contacts............................................................................310 Directory of Oil Companies in Iraq......................................................315 Alphabetical Index...................................................................................325 5 Preface The Iraq Oil Almanac has been created to significantly increase the stock of information available in local languages and contexts among independent journalists, civil society activists and others. The guide will provide a living database of publicly available information around the Iraqi oil industry, not only for journalists but for anybody wanting to know more about the Iraqi oil industry, and as such, be the basis for a locally based knowledge com- munity around the industry. This first edition of the guide has been prepared by MICT International and OpenOil UG. Internews Network will use it as the basis to work with a group of Iraqi journalists to develop future versions of the guide online and in book form. The Almanac will provide the basis for a series of capacity building work- shops for Iraqi journalists. The principal behind the workshops is twofold; to focus on creating a group of journalists with a high level of understand- ing of the topic who will then go on to be the sole administrators of the Ar- abic version of the wiki, as well as to create a lasting resource of informa- tion around the Iraqi oil industry. The English language version of the Wiki can be seen online at www.ir- aq.wiki.openoil.net and the Arabic language version of the Wiki can be seen online at www.ar.wiki.openoil.net. The information there currently will only increase in quantity and quality as the number of contributors to it in- creases. All of the information included here is publicly available, and is clearly ref- erenced (please see the footnotes at the end of each page) which enables the reader to easily find the source of the information for further research. Cru- cially, it was created using a MediaWiki, which means that there is now an online database of all of the articles included here which can be updated as more information becomes available. This also means that this printed guide is just a snapshot of what the database is at the moment; we hope that it will grow in the future as the online articles are updated. At the end of the workshop programme, we hope there will be an ever in- creasing group of energy specialist Iraqi journalists who would feel com- fortable and be capable of covering the oil industry, which is essential espe- cially in Iraq, both for increasing public knowledge and for holding the 6 state-owned oil industry accountable for their actions. OpenOil has created similar guides for a range of other countries. If you are interested in finding out more, please see our website: http://openoil.net, get in touch at [email protected] or telephone +49 30 246 303 622. 7 Energy Industry Background Iraqi Hydrocarbon Reserves Many reports and sources estimate oil and natural gas reserves in Iraq - and the Iraqi Kurdistan - in ways that conflict, agree, or simply differ. Reliable and relevant estimates are indicated and explained in the sections that fol- low in some detail. Oil BP Statistical Review Proven Reserves Iraq's official reserve estimate for crude oil proven reserves has risen to 115 billion barrels (bbl) today from 34 billion barrels in 1980.1 The major part of this increase in the estimates came during the 1980s, as can be seen from the graph on the right. There have been three significant leaps in the estimate during this time. • In 1982, early in the war with Iran, reserves estimates nearly doubled from 32 billion to 59 billion barrels. • In 1987, as the Iraqi economy was suffering from the long war with Iran, and as it appeared that OPEC was about to base production quotas on stated reserves, the figure jumped from 72 billion barrels to exactly 100 billion barrels. • In 1996, as the United Nations was finalising terms of the Oil For Food program which would allow Iraq to export oil again after a total ban for sev- eral years, the estimate jumped from 100 billion to 112 billion barrels. 1 "British Petroleum Statistical Review" 2009 8 • In 2000, barely some months before the United Kingdom and the United States carried out bombing raids in order to attempt to disable Iraq's air de- fense network,2 the reserves estimate was calculated at 112.5 billion bar- rels.3 • In 2009, the same year in which Iraq assumed control of security in Bagh- dad's 'Green Zone', most United States military personnel withdrew, and Ira- nian troops briefly occupied the Fakka oilfield,4 reserves estimates reached 115 billion barrels of oil, a figure that has remained stable until December 2011. However, as with other OPEC producers, it is not clear if the current estim- ate of 115 billion barrels also includes oil that has already been produced. The United States Geological Survey's World Petroleum Outlook of 2000 estimated that of the 100 billion barrel figure that was then being used, 22 billion barrels had already been produced, leaving only 78 billion barrels yet to be recovered from the proven reserves.5 Nevertheless, it should be noted that BP defines "proved reserves of oil" in its annual statistical review of world energy as "those quantities that geolo- gical and engineering information indicates with reasonable certainty can be recovered in the future from known reservoirs under existing economic and operating conditions [emphasis is this article's]." BP also states that the es- timates in their tables are compiled using: "a combination of primary offi- cial sources, third-party data from the OPEC Secretariat, Oil & Gas Journal and an independent estimate of Russian reserves based on information in the public domain." Daily and Yearly Production Estimates BP's June 2011 statistical review of world energy shows the profound vari- ations in oil production (both in terms of daily and yearly production) throughout the decade 2000-2009 and until 2010. Whereas yearly produc- tion had reached 104 million tonnes of oil (mtoe) in 2002, it dropped to 66.1 in 2003, rose back to 100 in 2004, and kept rising to 119.5 in 2008, 119.8 in 2009, and 120.4 mtoe in 2010. For the same years, averaged daily produc- tion was 2.116 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2002, dropped to 1.344 in 2 " Iraq Profile" BBC 20 December 2011. 3 " BP Statistical Review of World Energy June 2011: Oil BP website June 2011. 4 " Iran-Iraq Standoff Over Oil Field Ends" New York Times 20 December 2009. 5 " How much oil does iraq have?", Brookings Institute paper, May 12, 2003 9 2003, rose back to 2.03 in 2004, and kept rising to 2.428 in 2008, 2.442 in 2009, and 2.46 mb/d in 2010. Estimates for Ultimately Recoverable Crude Oil Since Iraq is the least explored of the oil-rich countries, there have been nu- merous claims of huge undiscovered reserves there as well - oil thought to exist, and expected to become economically recoverable - to the tune of hundreds of billions of barrels. The respected Petroleum Economist Magazine estimates that there may be as many as 200 bbl of oil in Iraq; the Federation of American Scientists estimates 215 bbl; a study by the Council on Foreign Relations and the James A. Baker III Institute at Rice University claimed that Iraq has 220 bbl of undiscovered oil. Overall, only about 2,000 wells reportedly have been drilled in Iraq (of which about 1,500-1,700 were actually producing oil in 2005), compared to around 150,000 producing wells in Texas for comparison purposes.6 Tareq Shafiq In 2003, Tareq Shafiq, a founding executive of the Iraq National Oil Com- pany in the 1960s, endorsed a figure of 140 billion barrels as being Iraq's eventual proven reserves, and a potential reserve of 215 billion barrels.7 Hussain al-Shahristani In early October 2011, the Iraqi Minister of Oil at the time, Hussain al- Shahristani, stated that the country's oil reserves were higher than previ- ously estimated and should be considered to be almost 143.1 billion barrels of oil.8 6 " OPEC Revenues", the US Energy Information Administration, retrieved July 25, 2010 7 " Iraq Oil Development Policy Options: In Search Of Balance", Middle East Economic Survey, December 15, 2003 8 " Iraq now the second biggest oil producer: oil reserves increase by 25% to 143.1 billion barrels" Daily Mail Online 5 October 2011. 10
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