Iraq's oil flow down in March lower due to lack of spending of funds
09-04-08 Iraq's oil production decreased in March, along with OPEC as a whole, as Baghdad was pressed by Washington to spend more of its revenues. Iraq oil production hit 2.4 mm bpd in February, and dropped slightly to 2.37 mm bpd in March, according to the new OPEC survey by the global energy information firm Platts.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries had been increasing its output each month, but dropped from 32.33 mm bpd in February to 32.22 mm bpd in March. It's still more than the cartel's production quota and Platts reports the two other countries with declining flow, Nigeria and Venezuela, had scheduled maintenance in March. Iran, Ecuador and Qatar all increased production.
Iraq had been steadily increasing production beyond the just below 2 mm bpd mark it had been stuck at or near for most of the post 2003 invasion. This is largely because of increased security on a patch of the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline that has been a major target of insurgents.
Oil flow has been steady at
as much as 350,000 bpd according to Iraq's Oil Ministry. Exports from the south have been around 1.6 mm bpd. The rest is consumed domestically.
During hearings on Capitol Hill, General David Petraeus, commander of multinational forces in Iraq, and US Ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker, have been scolded by members of Congress for not requiring Iraq to spend more of its funds. All of Iraq's oil sales are collected in an account of the Central Bank of Iraq at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, per UN mandate to prevent theft and misuse after Saddam Hussein's toppling. The money is then transferred from the CBI's account to the Iraq Finance Ministry to be disbursed as part of the budgetary process.
Iraq, however, not only lacks the institutional capacity to spend the money, but is hampered by politics, fears and reality of corruption, and violence and spends only a fraction of its capital budget.
Members of Congress have suggested legislation requiring the funds be spent or US expenses incurred since
the invasion to be repaid by Iraq.
Iraq's budget for reconstruction both this year and last year is larger than the US budget for Iraq reconstruction.
Source: www.upi.com