ANALYSIS-Iraq's oil industry in grip of despair
29 Nov 2006 15:36:51 GMT
Source: Reuters

More  By Peg Mackey

LONDON, Nov 29 (Reuters) - The present state of Iraq's
collapsing oil sector, its economic lifeline, is bleak
and its future looks far worse, despairing officials
say.

Another damaging oil attack this week, the prospect of
British troops handing over the oil city of Basra and
virtual civil war have all but crushed hope for Iraqi
officials battling to keep exports flowing to world
markets.

"One thing is sure. The worst is yet to come," an
Iraqi oil industry source said by telephone from
Baghdad.

His task is made harder still by gross mismanagement
at the oil ministry and chronic underinvestment in the
vital sector -- already neglected for decades due to
sanctions and wars.

"There is no line of authority at the oil ministry,"
said an oil official in the capital. "We are crippled.
We have the resources and the finances and we are
still failing."

With Baghdad in chaos, technocrats fear the oil
producing regions in the Shi'ite south and in the
north near Kurdistan may seize control of exports and
effectively dismember the country that holds the
world's third biggest oil reserves.

"Our country may be dismantled -- farewell to central
government," the oil source said. "This is the
danger."

Salvation, in the form of an eagerly-awaited oil law
designed to unify the country and lure foreign
investment, is unlikely to arrive by the end of the
year.

Control of the oilfields is dividing Iraq's three main
communities, the Arab Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims and
ethnic Kurds. Sunnis fear autonomous deals by Shi'ites
in the south and Kurds in the north will cut them out
of Iraq's oil wealth.

They, along with the Kurds and Turkmen, are disputing
the status of Kirkuk and its giant oilfield. A
December 2007 referendum will decide whether Kirkuk
city and the surrounding area should be controlled by
the Kurdistan regional government.

"That's the real flashpoint," said Peter Khalil of
Eurasia Group. "The Kurds have de facto taken control
of Kirkuk."

Whoever does lay claim to Kirkuk will inherit an
80-year-old oilfield that pumped 800,000 bpd or nearly
a third of Iraq's output under Saddam Hussein.

Rates have slowed to a trickle since the U.S.-led
invasion in 2003 as relentless sabotage along the
northern export pipeline to Turkey has kept exports
mostly idle.

The field was dealt another blow on Monday when a
mortar attack ignited nearby oil tanks and cut Kirkuk
production to about 100,000 bpd from 300,000 bpd.

RESTIVE SOUTH

Though plagued by factional fighting, mainly Shi'ite
Basra has largely escaped the sectarian violence.

The southern Rumaila oilfields have provided steady
exports of around 1.5 million bpd for close to a year.

"The oil flow from the south has been sacrosanct even
with Baghdad falling apart," said a Western executive
at a major oil company. "But will it last?"

Although more than 7,000 British troops are in the
region, they plan to leave by the end of 2007.

Eurasia Group's Khalil said there was an outside
chance of an attack on oil facilities when British
troops start their hand over. He said, however, the
decrepit state of the south's oil network posed a
bigger risk to oil flows.

"Even if the security situation gets worse, I don't
see the Shi'ites deliberately targeting the oil
infrastructure," he said. "They're not going to attack
their lifeline."

Iraq's production is stuck at around 2 million bpd,
well down on the nearly 3 million bpd hit in the final
days of Saddam and even further from the 3.7 million
pumped in 1979, prior to the Iran-Iraq war.

A modest amount of foreign cash could swiftly boost
flows towards four million bpd. But multinationals
will not act without a legal framework and peace
restored.

Senior Iraqi officials were to resume talks to resolve
a dispute over the energy legislation last Thursday,
when bombing in the capital killed 200. There was no
word on progress.

Oil Minister Hussain Shahristani wants to retain a
strong grip with only participation by the provinces,
officials said.

"From a technical and economic standpoint, this is a
reasonable solution," said a senior Iraqi executive.
"But whether that's acceptable to all parties remains
to be seen."

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