Two stories, one from CNSNews, onr from the Russian
press.

Russia Will Train Iraqi Oil Workers With Eye on Future
Deals
By Sergei Blagov
CNSNews.com Correspondent
July 28, 2004

Moscow (CNSNews.com) - Russia has begun providing
assistance to Iraq's oil sector, hoping to revive its
once-strong position there, even as the shadow of the
oil-for-food program scandal continues to hang over
the industry.

A first group of Iraqi oil specialists has arrived in
Western Siberia for training at facilities run by
Russia's top oil company, LUKoil.

The company said Tuesday it planned to train 100 Iraqi
oil workers this year, and another 150 each year
between 2005 and 2009. It also plans to provide
$5-million dollars worth of humanitarian supplies in
2004-5 to assist the recovery of Iraq's oil sector.

In a statement, the oil giant's president, Vagit
Alekperov, said the arrival of the first group was an
important step in dialogue with Iraq and a "good
start" for future Russian oil projects in Iraq.

Russia, which opposed the war to overthrow Saddam
Hussein and has refused to send peacekeepers to help
rebuild and secure Iraq, hopes to secure its decades'
old oil investments in the country under the new
government.

In 1997, Hussein signed a 23-year,
multi-billion-dollar contract with a LUKoil-led
consortium to develop the West Qurna-2 oil fields, but
canceled the deal in February 2003, just before the
war.

LUKoil insists that the mega-deal remains valid and
hopes to be pumping crude in the country as early as
next year.

It signed a memorandum of understanding signed with
the Iraqi Oil Ministry earlier this year dealing with
rebuilding the industry and training Iraqi workers. At
the same time, an "understanding" was reportedly
reached over the West Qurna issue.

During a visit to Moscow this week, Iraqi Foreign
Minister Hoshyar Zebari said Baghdad would "carefully
assess all of our previous agreements with Russian
companies" but also said there was "a strong chance"
Russia would keep or secure new oil contracts.

The two governments are to appoint representatives to
check into all Russian contracts agreed under the
previous regime, including those within the framework
of the United Nations' oil-for-food program, Zebari
said.

The U.N. program is a sensitive issue in Russia
because of allegations that Russian entities illegally
benefited from a project that was designed to help
ordinary Iraqis at a time the regime was targeted by
international sanctions.

Earlier this year, Iraqi media alleged that some 40
Russian companies and individuals, including entities
linked to the Russian Orthodox Church, the Communist
Party and the far-right Liberal Democratic Party, took
part in an illegal kickback scheme.

Russian officials and oil companies have denied the
claims, which are the subject of a probe approved by
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

Russia was Iraq's largest supplier under the program.
Of the $18.3 billion in oil-for-food contracts
approved by the Security Council, some $4.2 billion
went to Russia. Eleven Russian oil companies bought
tens of million of barrels of oil from Iraq under the
deal.

Earlier this month, the Iraqi official heading the
investigation into the scandal, Ihsan Karim, was
killed in a bomb attack.




Lukoil Hopes Training of Iraqi Oil Men Will Yield
Contracts To Work Iraqi Fields
Moscow Nezavisimaya Gazeta in Russian 28 Jul 04 p 2

[Report by Petr Orekhin: "Road to Baghdad Goes by Way
of Kogalym. Lukoil Hopes That Program To Train Iraqi
Specialists Will Help It To Recover Oil Fields in That
Country"]

The first Iraqi specialists who will undergo practical
training at Lukoil enterprises arrived yesterday in
the city of Kogalym in the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous
Okrug.  In this way the memorandum of mutual
understanding and cooperation between Lukoil and the
Iraqi Oil Ministry, which was signed in Baghdad in
March of this year, has begun to be implemented.  It
is obvious that the company's main interest lies not
in teaching the Iraqis something but in persuading the
country's new leadership to leave Lukoil with the
contracts to work a number of fields which were
concluded under the [Saddam] Husayn regime.  "I regard
the arrival of the first group of Iraqi oilmen at
Lukoil for practical training as one more step in the
development of our dialogue with the Iraqi side.  I am
sure that our cooperation in the humanitarian sphere
marks a good start for Russian companies to begin
implementing oil projects in Iraq," Lukoil President
Vagit Alekperov said.  At present, however, the fate
of these contracts is unknown.

  Iraqi Oil Minister Thamir al-Ghadban told RIA
Novosti that all the contracts in the oil sphere
concluded earlier by foreign companies with Iraq now
"are at the stage of being studied and prepared."
This concerns Russian companies too.  "I hope that it
(the decision on the contracts -- Nezavisimaya Gazeta)
will be acceptable and will satisfy everyone," the
Iraqi oil minister declared.

  The existing accords which individual Russian
companies have with Iraq (the Lukoil and Oil Ministry
memorandum) certainly do not guarantee that their
contracts will be confirmed.  "The memorandum is a
framework agreement and says nothing more," Maksim
Shein, chief of the BrokerKreditServis Investment
Company's analysis department, told Nezavisimaya
Gazeta's correspondent.  "Lukoil has not yet invested
a single dollar in Iraq, and so it is too soon to
speak of its chances in these talks.  To sign a
cooperation accord is the same as shaking each other's
hand but keeping to your own opinion."

  At the same time analysts in Russia say that Russian
companies do have prospects in Iraq.  However, a
certain price will have to be paid for them.  "In our
view the likelihood that projects in Iraq will be
restored to Russian companies does exist.  But it is
linked to a number of political and economic factors,"
Dmitriy Mangilev, analyst for the Prospekt Investment
Company, said.  "The possibility cannot be ruled out
that Russia will have to grant Western -- primarily US
-- oil companies access to certain projects in our
country in exchange for Russian companies' access to
deposits in Iraq.  Maybe the sale of the state's stake
in Lukoil, the main contender for which is
ConocoPhillips, is such a project and this will enable
the Lukoil Company to resume contracts in Iraq."

  But for now, instead of developing Iraqi fields,
Lukoil will teach that country's specialists.  And not
just the practice but also the theory of oil work.
"The practical training program, which is designed to
last a month, provides, in particular, for theoretical
and practical lessons in the disciplines of 'modern
oil and gas extraction technologies,' 'oil and gas
collection and preparation techniques and technology,'
'automation of the technological processes of oil and
gas extraction and preparation at production
facilities,' and 'equipment for operating oil and gas
wells,'" Lukoil's official report points out.




__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Mail is new and improved - Check it out!
http://promotions.yahoo.com/new_mail

Reply via email to