Last Updated: Wed Jan 09, 2013 18:28 pm (KSA) 15:28 pm (GMT)

Iraq approves oil exploration deal with Kuwait Energy

Facing souring diplomatic ties with Turkey, Iraq has asked Kuwait Energy to partner on an oil exploration deal in the country. (Reuters)
Facing souring diplomatic ties with Turkey, Iraq has asked Kuwait Energy to partner on an oil exploration deal in the country. (Reuters)

Iraq has approved an oil exploration deal with a Kuwait Energy-led group, a senior oil official said on Wednesday.

Iraq has decided to partner with the Kuwaiti firm instead of Turkey’s state-owned TPAO, which the cabinet decided to expel.

Facing souring diplomatic ties with Turkey, Iraq asked Kuwait Energy last year to acquire TPAO’s shares in exploration block 9. At the time, the Kuwaiti company held a 30 percent stake.

“Kuwait Energy has acquired the stake of the Turkish company TPAO, and now it’s holding 70 percent of the contract, and Dragon Oil PLC will hold 30 percent,” Abdul-Mahdy al-Ameedi, director of the ministry’s contracts directorate, said in an interview.

Iraq’s oil ministry plans to sign the final deal on Jan. 27, Ameedi said.

Baghdad has been angered by Ankara’s moves to forge closer ties with the Kurdistan Regional Government in northern Iraq, which is in a dispute with the federal government over oil and land rights.

Turkey and Iraq have also accused each other of inciting sectarian tensions and have summoned each other’s ambassadors in tit-for-tat maneuvers.

The contract provides the consortium rights to explore and develop oil block 9, which is located in Iraq’s southern Basra province.

OPEC member Iraq is expected to be the world’s biggest source of new oil supplies over the next few years. It plans to open up more rounds for oil and gas blocks for auction.

A handful of international companies won bids last May at Iraq’s fourth energy auction, which had a poor showing because of tough contract terms drawn up by Baghdad.

Iraq has offered foreign companies less attractive service agreements, in which they receive a fee rather than the Kurdistan’s production-sharing deals, which allow them to profit jointly from the output.

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