Chinese engineers open Al-Ahdab oil field in central Iraq
Chinese engineers have inaugurated an Iraqi oil field, the first major oil development deal secured by a foreign firm
since the 2003 fall of Saddam Hussein, officials said. The project, which follows the signing of a $ 3-bn contract
late last year, revives a deal signed in 1997 that granted China exploration rights to Al-Ahdab oil field in central
Iraq.
"This project will provide a number of jobs and opportunities for investment," Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani
said at a ribbon-cutting ceremony. "It will provide the province with electricity and power to operate the power
station in Zurbadiyah and to help contribute to development and prosperity," he said.
Al-Ahdab's oil production is expected to reach 25,000 bpd in the first three years and expand to up to 115,000 bpd in
six years, according to China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC). The contract, signed in November in Baghdad, allows
CNPC and another Chinese company, Zhenhua Oil, to develop Al-Ahdab oil field in the province of Wasit for 23
years.
"We look at this opportunity as the start of rebuilding the prosperity of Wasit," said Abd al-Latif Hamad Tarfah, the
provincial governor. "This is the first investment project in Wasit and we hope it will last a long time."
After China won the rights in the 1997 deal, then valued at $ 700 mm over 23 years, activities were suspended due to
United Nations sanctions and then by security issues following the US-led invasion in 2003. Output from the field
will mostly be exported but some will be used to fuel power generation stations nearby to ease electricity
shortages.
Baghdad said earlier it had managed to change the previous joint venture contract into a service agreement, under
which CNPC would charge a service fee of $ 6 a barrel, decreasing eventually to $ 3.
The Al-Ahdab oil contract, while now strictly a service deal, will be worth an estimated $ 3 bn to the Chinese and
offers them an entry into Iraq ahead of Western majors.
Iraq has 115 bn barrels of proven oil reserves -- the third largest in the world -- and at the end of February was
producing 2.310 mm bpd. China's state oil firms are scouring the world for resources to power what is now the globe's
third largest economy.
