Bill
11-16-2007, 08:00 PM
But, except for those stinking cheater oil firms signing deals with the Kurds, Iraq doesn't welcome those deals.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
What this means, folks, is that the shia puppet government is cutting the sunnis and the kurds out of the oil, by saying it will sign oil deals without an oil law.
Who cares, right, just so long as the oil get's pumped ASAP.
Fuck the sunnis, we support the shia now, right?
The american taxpayer will spend trillions and the oil companies will make trillions - this is what the wingers have always been about.
But, thank god, they are starting to get to the pumping. Oil production worldwide is dropping at a pretty steep rate - Mexico alone is projected to go from our #3 supplier to nothing in five years or less.
http://www.upi.com/International_Security/Energy/Briefing/2007/11/16/iraqi_oil_minister_some_firms_welcome/1481/
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, Nov. 16 (UPI) -- Oil companies are welcome to Iraq, Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani said, except for the "opportunist" firms already in Iraqi Kurd territory.
Iraq is moving toward signing a batch of oil deals, with or without a national oil law, as it attempts to pick up production of the world's third-largest oil reserves.
"All the major oil companies … are very interested for obvious reasons to come work in Iraq and with the improved security conditions they've been approaching us and indicating their keen interest," Shahristani told reporters on the sidelines of an OPEC summit in Riyadh. "We have always told them that they are most welcome to come work in Iraq with us and we don't necessarily need a new hydrocarbon law to do that.
"We have our prevailing laws that allow the minister of oil in Iraq to sign any kind of contract; of course it has to be presented to the Parliament depending on the kind of contract," Shahristani said. "We have already started talking to a few major oil companies who are interested in the super giant fields in the south which are already producing. We are producing oil from there but there are new technologies, they have been working and studying these fields. We'll find a way to cooperate to enhance production from these fields and make more oil available to the world market."
While Baghdad has only recently said it would soon sign oil deals, based on a Saddam Hussein-era oil law, the Kurdistan Regional Government passed its own oil law in August and since then has signed 14 oil deals with smaller international oil companies.
The dispute over the oil law is about federal vs. local control over various parts of the oil sector. Shahristani has called the KRG deals "illegal" and threatened to blacklist those who sign. He didn't say whether there will be any consequences for the Kurdish region.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
What this means, folks, is that the shia puppet government is cutting the sunnis and the kurds out of the oil, by saying it will sign oil deals without an oil law.
Who cares, right, just so long as the oil get's pumped ASAP.
Fuck the sunnis, we support the shia now, right?
The american taxpayer will spend trillions and the oil companies will make trillions - this is what the wingers have always been about.
But, thank god, they are starting to get to the pumping. Oil production worldwide is dropping at a pretty steep rate - Mexico alone is projected to go from our #3 supplier to nothing in five years or less.
http://www.upi.com/International_Security/Energy/Briefing/2007/11/16/iraqi_oil_minister_some_firms_welcome/1481/
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, Nov. 16 (UPI) -- Oil companies are welcome to Iraq, Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani said, except for the "opportunist" firms already in Iraqi Kurd territory.
Iraq is moving toward signing a batch of oil deals, with or without a national oil law, as it attempts to pick up production of the world's third-largest oil reserves.
"All the major oil companies … are very interested for obvious reasons to come work in Iraq and with the improved security conditions they've been approaching us and indicating their keen interest," Shahristani told reporters on the sidelines of an OPEC summit in Riyadh. "We have always told them that they are most welcome to come work in Iraq with us and we don't necessarily need a new hydrocarbon law to do that.
"We have our prevailing laws that allow the minister of oil in Iraq to sign any kind of contract; of course it has to be presented to the Parliament depending on the kind of contract," Shahristani said. "We have already started talking to a few major oil companies who are interested in the super giant fields in the south which are already producing. We are producing oil from there but there are new technologies, they have been working and studying these fields. We'll find a way to cooperate to enhance production from these fields and make more oil available to the world market."
While Baghdad has only recently said it would soon sign oil deals, based on a Saddam Hussein-era oil law, the Kurdistan Regional Government passed its own oil law in August and since then has signed 14 oil deals with smaller international oil companies.
The dispute over the oil law is about federal vs. local control over various parts of the oil sector. Shahristani has called the KRG deals "illegal" and threatened to blacklist those who sign. He didn't say whether there will be any consequences for the Kurdish region.