Last week, Iraq open an auction for oil companies to bid how much they would be willing to receive for each barrel of oil they would extract. The outcome of this auction is quite interesting.
Here are some quotes from an AP report:
Chevron Corp., the second-largest U.S. oil company behind Exxon Mobil Corp., said it decided not to submit a bid in the opening round, but didn't rule out doing so in future auctions. [...]
The first field on offer was the day's sole success story. But also underlined the government and the companies' widely differing expectations. Two consortiums, headed by British giant BP and Exxon Mobil, submitted offers for the Rumaila oil field — the largest prize on offer with 17.8 billion barrels in crude reserves. The Exxon Mobil-led consortium, which included Malaysia's Petronas, requested $4.80 per barrel for production over the minimum, while BP wanted $3.99 per barrel. The ministry was willing to pay $2 per barrel. BP agreed to match the ministry's price and won the contract for Rumaila.Exxon Mobil, in a move mirrored by other companies throughout the day, refused to revise its bid. "Our numbers were not far from reality, and proof of that is that BP accepted our price for Rumaila," al-Shahristani said after the auction. He said he believed oil companies inflated their requests to cover security companies' fees.
But dollars aside, interest was much thinner than Iraqi officials anticipated."It's been nearly 40 years now that Iraq has failed to live up to its oil potential," said Daniel Yergin, a Pulitzer Prize winning author and chairman of IHS CERA, an energy consultancy. "It's not a foregone conclusion that these arrangements will, in themselves, do what needs to be done. It's only a beginning, and it's an uncertain beginning."
No bids were offered for the Mansouria gas field in Diyala province, home to some of Iraq's worst violence. Only one bid was submitted for each of the Bai Hassan and Kirkuk oil fields in the north, the Akkas gas field, and the Missan fields — three adjacent fields offered as one bloc.
China's CNOOC led the consortium bidding for Missan, and sought a payment of $21.40 per barrel over the baseline minimum output level. Iraq said it was willing to pay $2 per barrel.
The Zubair oil field attracted four consortiums, while the West Qurna Stage I field in the south drew interest from five groups led by France's Total, Russia's Lukoil, Spain's Repsol, Exxon and CNPC. Again, in the case of West Qurna, the bids were as much as 10 times more than what the government was willing to pay.
Officials had earlier said that any fields not agreed on would be re-offered in subsequent rounds. Al-Shahristani, however, said the top offers on all the non-awarded fields — except for Mansouria — would be presented to the cabinet for review.
The step was clearly aimed at saving the process. But it embraced the same solution that has stoked parliamentary ire.
Some lawmakers have argued that al-Shahristani's insistence on having the Cabinet approve the deals, instead of the parliament, would render the deals unconstitutional.
The political wrangling was largely an effort by the country's various political blocs to secure a stake in Iraq's oil fortunes.
But whatever its roots, the dispute has done little to calm international oil companies' angst.
The firms were already worried about Iraq's security situation, the lack of a new national oil law and the government's argument that deals struck independently with the semiautonomous Kurds in the north are illegal.[...]
The minister, however, has insisted he was working for the country's best interests. Iraqi officials have estimated that based on crude oil at $50 per barrel, the companies could have earned around $16 billion in total. Iraq, meanwhile, would have brought in over $1.7 trillion.
The company response to the bidding sends a clear signal to Iraq, said analysts.
It says "the companies will still be there, but they've made it clear what their baseline is, and that they can't go into the red even to get access to Iraqi oil," said Ciszuk. "The risks are just too great."
AP Business writers Tarek El-Tablawy in Cairo and John Porretto in Houston contributed to this report.
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