giovedì 15 ottobre 2009

L'Eni va in Iraq

Baghdad ha raggiunto un accordo con un consorzio guidato da
Eni per lo sfruttamento del giacimento petrolifero di
Zubair. Quarant'anni dopo la nazionalizzazione
dell'industria petrolifera irachena, quest'accordo segnala
la volontà dell'Iraq di attirare sul suo territorio le più
grandi società petrolifere del mondo. Paolo Scaroni,
l'amministratore delegato dell'Eni, ha dichiarato che
"Zubair è uno dei più importanti giacimenti petroliferi del
mondo, in grado di produrre più di un milioni di barili al
giorno".

Financial Times, Gran Bretagna

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9f3214fe-b823-11de-8ca9-00144feab49a.html

Eni wins Iraq oil field deal

By Carola Hoyos in London

Published: October 13 2009 19:22 | Last updated: October 13 2009 19:22

Iraq has given a consortium led by Eni, the Italian oil group, the right to develop its giant Zubair field, in a deal that signals the country’s desire to attract more of the world’s biggest oil companies 40 years after nationalising its oil industry.

Tuesday’s breakthrough, which needs cabinet approval, came after Iraq sweetened its terms following the failure of a June auction. It could lead to further foreign investment in a country with the world’s third-largest oil reserves.

As part of the agreement, the Iraqi government told the Eni consortium to drop Sinopec, the Chinese state-owned oil company, as a partner.

Baghdad has vowed to block Sinopec from its oil resources because of its entry into Kurdistan, the oil-rich semi-autonomous region in northern Iraq. In June Sinopec agreed to a C$8.3bn (US$7.2bn) takeover of Addax, which had a stake in the Kurdish Taq Taq field.

Eni and its minority-share partners – Kogas of Korea and Occidental of the US – are only the second group of international oil companies to enter Iraq since it nationalised its industry four decades ago. BP and CNPC were the only companies willing to accept Iraq’s tough fiscal terms in the country’s June auction.

Paolo Scaroni, Eni chief executive, told the Financial Times: “Zubair is one of the most important oil fields in the world. It is one of very few that is capable of producing more than 1m barrels a day. Because we are going to Iraq, it means we will not be doing other things.”

Mr Scaroni said the project to boost the field’s production from 200,000 barrels per day to 1.125m bpd within seven years, as Eni has promised, would require an investment of about $10bn.

Under the agreement, Eni and its partners will receive $2 for each barrel over 1.125m bpd they are able to pump from the field, which holds reserves of 4bn barrels and is Iraq’s fourth-largest. In the first bidding round, Eni – like many of its peers – refused to accept the $2 payment. Eni had asked for more, but agreed on $2 after Baghdad sweetened other terms that raised the overall value of the contract.

Iraq is in talks with other companies that walked away in June. Lukoil of Russia on Tuesday confirmed that it and US partner ConocoPhillips would restart discussions for Iraq’s West Qurna field on Wednesday. Royal Dutch Shell said it was still in talks with Baghdad.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9f3214fe-b823-11de-8ca9-00144feab49a.html

Nessun commento: