alan131210 wrote:shahristani is a hardcore chauvinist and a Kurd hater, when you look at his face you can see hatred in his eyes the guy is hopeless and i do not see anything good coming from him towards Kurdistan so we show just let him bark about, we all know where it got him
alan131210 wrote:
As for Iraq banning all supermajors leaving Iraq with small to med ones your infrastructure from now on will also be as such
Kurdistano wrote:Do you want to bet Shahristani will not put Gasprom in his "Blacklist". Since Gasprom is a Russian company and Malikis masters in Iran will not open their mouth.
After Saddam Hussein's overthrow in 2003, oil companies from around the world rushed in for the right to both rework old, debilitated fields, and to drill new ones. But Baghdad has exacted tight-fisted terms, signing only low-paying service contracts that effectively turn high-risk, high-return wildcatters into mere hired hands. Until recently, the world's oil companies have bristled at the terms, but gone along in hopes of conventional production sharing agreements down the road. Now, the grumbling in the ranks is growing to a roar.
A fourth-round auction of oil properties in May showed both that Baghdad seems to have no intention of greater generosity -- and also that the companies are fed up. Just three of 12 blocks on offer found successful takers.
In October, ordinarily ultraconservative Exxon uncharacteristically signaled the first sign of upheaval by signing an exploration deal with Kurdistan despite having an agreement to produce oil at Iraq's West Qurna field. That seemed quite a gamble: West Qurna, after all, holds some 8.7 billion barrels of oil, and there was a distinct possibility that Baghdad would revoke the deal as punishment for Exxon's opening to the Kurds. Now, Total's decision -- the purchase of a 35 percent stake in two exploration blocks in Kurdistan -- makes what had been a gingerly tip-toeing toward the KRG look more like a headlong rush. Total did not respond to an email requesting comment.
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2 ... _a_country
Return to Mega Threads (Top-100 Kurdish Topics)
Registered users: Bing [Bot]