Risk-tolerant China investing heavily in Iraq as U.S.  companies hold back
By Leila Fadel and Ernesto LondoƱo
Washington  Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 1, 2010; 1:26 PM 
AL-AHDAB OIL FIELD, IRAQ -- _China_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/china.html?nav=el)  
didn't take part in the U.S.-led  
invasion of _Iraq_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/iraq.html?nav=el)  or the 
bloody military battles  that followed. It hasn't invested 
in reconstruction projects or efforts by the  West to fortify the struggling 
democracy in the heart of the Middle East.  
But as the U.S. military draws down and Iraq opens up to foreign 
investment,  China and a handful of other countries that weren't part of the 
so-called 
 coalition of the willing are poised to cash in. These countries are 
expanding  their foothold beyond Iraq's oil reserves -- the world's third 
largest 
-- to  areas such as construction, government services and even tourism, 
while American  companies show little interest in investing here.  
"The U.S. really doesn't know what to do in Iraq," said Fawzi Hariri, 
Iraq's  industry minister. "I have been personally, as the minister of 
industry, 
trying  to woo U.S. companies into Iraq. There is nothing yet. Nothing 
tangible."  
The National Investment Commission said the Americans' response has been  
surprising.  
"They have not come in with the force or magnitude we expected from them,"  
said Sami al-Araji, the commission's chairman. "The entry is cautious. 
We're  waiting for those few daring ones to come in and enter into the market 
from the  front yard not our back yard, and we will welcome them."  
In the past two years, Chinese companies have walked away with stakes in  
three of the 11 contracts the Iraqi Oil Ministry has signed in its bid to  
increase crude output by about 450 percent over the next seven years. They 
also  renegotiated a $3 billion deal that dates back to when Saddam Hussein was 
in  power.  
Only two American firms won stakes in oil deals, an underwhelming showing  
that industry analysts and U.S. officials say reflects deep concerns about 
doing  business in a country besieged by insecurity, corruption and political 
turmoil.  
"They made a mistake and overestimated the risk," said Ruba Husari, an oil  
analyst in Baghdad who runs the Iraq Oil Forum, a trade Web site. "I think 
they  did not realize on the spot that it was the biggest window of 
opportunity, and  they missed out."  
In an effort to meet the rising energy demands of its fast-growing economy, 
 China has invested aggressively in oil-rich nations. Chinese companies 
have made  notable inroads in the Middle East and Africa, in part because of a 
higher  tolerance for risk and a savvy diplomatic corps that has laid the 
groundwork for  advantageous deals.  
Iraqi officials say they are heartened by their expanding ties with China 
but  are still pursuing investment from other nations.  
"They have gained a number of plum contracts for energy," Iraqi Foreign  
Minister Hoshyar Zebari said of the Chinese. "Wherever there is an oil well in 
 the world, you'll see a Chinese flag next to it." Investors from around  
the world
At the Ahdab oil field in Wasit Province, roughly 100 miles south of 
Baghdad,  about 200 Chinese laborers have begun work under a contract 
renegotiated 
by a  Chinese state-owned consortium, Al Waha Oil Co., in 2008. Workers in 
red  jumpsuits operate imported oil rigs alongside their Iraqi counterparts. 
Their  workplaces are heavily protected by barricades and guards.  
"People know they didn't participate in the invasion or the sanctions, and  
they have an old participation in Iraq that predates Saddam Hussein," said 
Ahmed  Abdul-Redha al-Zanki, the senior engineer for Iraq's North Oil Co., 
which is  working with the Chinese to develop the field. "They work with us 
as partners,"  in stark contrast to the condescending practices of Western 
companies, he said.  
The French and Chinese have also made forays into the cement industry. The  
Chinese have started building a billion-dollar power plant in the south. 
The  Chinese and the United Arab Emirates are in advance talks to build 
residential  complexes. The French automaker Renault and _Germany's_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/germany.html?nav=el)  
Mercedes-Benz 
are in advanced  talks to make trucks for industrial transport, according 
to Iraqi officials. The  South Koreans signed a memorandum of understanding 
to build a  multimillion-dollar steel mill in the south and a power plant, 
and the Turks  have scored a series of construction and government services 
contracts.  
Save a $3 billion contract with General Electric to purchase 
power-generating  equipment for Iraq, Iraqi and U.S. officials are hard pressed 
to point 
to any  significant U.S. investment in Iraq. Outside of the two service 
contracts that  U.S. companies were awarded and U.S. government contracts, the 
United States  "consistently ranks in the bottom" among investors, according 
to a 2009 study by  Dunia Frontiers Consultants, which tracks private 
investment in Iraq. The United  Arab Emirates is Iraq's top private investor, 
followed by _South Korea_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/countries/korea.html?nav=el) , the 
study said.  
"We're coming off a financial crisis," a senior U.S. diplomat said, 
speaking  on the condition of anonymity because of embassy rules. "You have to 
look 
at  your bottom line. It's not the best time to be suddenly in the market 
as a new  place to invest." Worth the risk?
U.S. companies will probably continue to shy away, particularly after the  
U.S. State Department's latest Iraq investment climate assessment, issued in 
 March.  
"Potential investor should prepare themselves for significant security 
costs;  cumbersome and confusing procedures for business visas or new business  
registrations; long payment delays on some Iraqi government contracts; and  
sometimes unreliable, non-transparent dispute resolution mechanisms," the  
assessment said. "Allegations of corruption are still endemic, and the legacy 
of  central planning and inefficient state-owned enterprises continue to 
inhibit  economic development."  
But several countries have come to see Iraq as an incredibly promising 
market  despite the risks.  
The French government, which also did not participate in the war, recently  
set up a center in Baghdad to support French companies seeking to test the  
waters.  
"This is a rich country," French Ambassador Boris Boillon said in an  
interview. "In this world of recession, in this period of global crisis, we 
need  
to get growth and expansion wherever you can find it."  
Last fall, the French government helped arrange for 100 French businessmen 
to  attend a five-day trade fair in Baghdad. Most other European and 
American  delegations decided at the last minute that attending would be too 
risky. 
 
The French chartered five buses and ferried the businessmen daily to the  
fairgrounds.  
Boillon said American companies are not competition. It's China and South  
Korea, which have lower labor costs, that investors need to watch out for.  
"I think Americans are fed up," he said. "There is Iraq fatigue in the U.S. 
 When you tell an American: 'You can go to Iraq and make business, because 
there  are opportunities,' the guy thinks twice and says, 'Oh Iraq -- that 
bloody  country.' " 

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