chartist2004
- 15 Apr 2004 12:02
The tiny Irish stock on the brink of landing 'the first' post-sanction oil deal in Iraq. Ref 'Fleet Street Letter' 12-04-04..
windsorgolf
- 20 Apr 2006 11:46
- 2562 of 2700
could have new PM in place very soon,good news for PET
2517GEORGE
- 20 Apr 2006 11:52
- 2563 of 2700
Yes, we could do with some positive news, it seems ages since we PET holders had something to cheer us up.
2517
greekman
- 20 Apr 2006 13:23
- 2564 of 2700
Iraq's Jaafari Willing to Step Aside; Party to Decide His Fate
April 20 (Bloomberg) -- Iraq's ruling United Iraqi Alliance may choose a new candidate for prime minister after Ibrahim al- Jaafari said he's willing to step aside, a lawmaker from the majority Shiite-Muslim bloc said.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000087&sid=ajkch74z9Tl4&refer=top_world_news
barrenwuffet
- 20 Apr 2006 16:55
- 2565 of 2700
If youve had a good day please consider giving a donation to the lads dressed as Elvis racing 350 miles to the North Pole on behalf of Great Ormond Street Hospital It makes the London Marathon seem like a stroll in the park!
To donate or view how theyre getting on visit
http://www.elvispolarchallenge.co.uk/
thanks for your time
windsorgolf
- 20 Apr 2006 20:02
- 2566 of 2700
GEORGE,,,just keep thinking about 7 sept 05,170% rise in about ten minutes.we away will have another not too far
2517GEORGE
- 21 Apr 2006 10:06
- 2567 of 2700
windsorgolf, I try not to think too much about that sp spike, it tends to upset me ha! ha! A lot of PET investors are still hoping that the hard working David Horgan can work some more magic for them, but some news (good) would be nice.
2517
Oilywag
- 21 Apr 2006 15:51
- 2568 of 2700
Copied from another board today.
By Ghaida Ghantous
DOHA (Reuters) - Iraq is ready to move swiftly in negotiating multi-billion-dollar oilfield contracts with international majors and can sign deals before an investment law is passed by the government, a top oil official said on Friday.
The Iraqi oil sector has been crippled by attacks on energy installations, political wrangling, lack of funds and mismanagement since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. To reverse output declines, it needs to ensure the flow of funds and restore security to allow for maintenance and development.
"The investment law could take some time and we are not prepared to wait for that long," Shamkhi Faraj, director general of marketing and economics at the ministry of oil, told Reuters.
"I think (negotiations) can happen very fast. I am confident that we can do our own legislation within the contract itself to assure the investors that if any new regulation comes through it will not affect them," he added.
Only small oil firms, such as Norway's DNO (DNO.OL: Quote, Profile, Research), have ventured into Iraq, home to the world's third largest oil reserves. The majors are eager to take a stake in the industry but are waiting for security and the political process to stabilize as well as an investment law.
"I think we could talk more on the procedures and possibilities and when they are ready to come in. We are ready to make all the things required for making investment...but they are hesitant because of the security situation," Faraj said.
"But that doesn't really exclude that we start talking," he said. "What we have on offer are the oilfields in the south, the big ones that will add some 3 million barrels per day to our production and that's what the big companies are looking for."
Iraq's oil minister was set to meet with officials from oil companies gathered in Doha for the International Energy Forum, a round table for producers and consumers, Faraj said. Among those expected in Qatar were Exxon Mobil (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) Chief Executive Rex Tillerson and Chevron (CVX.N: Quote, Profile, Research) boss David O'Reilly. Continued...
There was a link attached to the word "Continued ..." above which has not copied across. But whats above will do me for the weekend.
The oily one
windsorgolf
- 21 Apr 2006 15:55
- 2569 of 2700
By Ghaida Ghantous
DOHA (Reuters) - Iraq is ready to move swiftly in negotiating multi-billion-dollar oilfield contracts with international majors and can sign deals before an investment law is passed by the government, a top oil official said on Friday.
The Iraqi oil sector has been crippled by attacks on energy installations, political wrangling, lack of funds and mismanagement since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. To reverse output declines, it needs to ensure the flow of funds and restore security to allow for maintenance and development.
"The investment law could take some time and we are not prepared to wait for that long," Shamkhi Faraj, director general of marketing and economics at the ministry of oil, told Reuters.
"I think (negotiations) can happen very fast. I am confident that we can do our own legislation within the contract itself to assure the investors that if any new regulation comes through it will not affect them," he added.
Only small oil firms, such as Norway's DNO (DNO.OL: Quote, Profile, Research), have ventured into Iraq, home to the world's third largest oil reserves. The majors are eager to take a stake in the industry but are waiting for security and the political process to stabilize as well as an investment law.
"I think we could talk more on the procedures and possibilities and when they are ready to come in. We are ready to make all the things required for making investment...but they are hesitant because of the security situation," Faraj said.
"But that doesn't really exclude that we start talking," he said. "What we have on offer are the oilfields in the south, the big ones that will add some 3 million barrels per day to our production and that's what the big companies are looking for."
Iraq's oil minister was set to meet with officials from oil companies gathered in Doha for the International Energy Forum, a round table for producers and consumers, Faraj said. Among those expected in Qatar were Exxon Mobil (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) Chief Executive Rex Tillerson and Chevron (CVX.N: Quote, Profile, Research) boss David O'Reilly. Continued...
windsorgolf
- 21 Apr 2006 16:46
- 2570 of 2700
the oily one...this is GREAT news
greekman
- 21 Apr 2006 18:50
- 2571 of 2700
Oilywag,Windsorgolf,
We keep hearing similar stories over the last few months hinting that deals can be signed, but the info you have found does look very substantive. A good find. Could be those blue skies are just over the horizon.
Have a good weekend, Greek.
Oilywag
- 21 Apr 2006 18:58
- 2572 of 2700
Another cut and paste from another board
Al-Jaafari Ally New Nominee for Iraq PM
Apr 21, 12:39 PM EDT
By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Shiite politicians agreed Friday to nominate Jawad al-Maliki as prime minister, replacing the incumbent in a bid to clear the way for a long-delayed new government, two Shiite officials said.
Al-Maliki is a top ally of outgoing Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, whose nomination had sparked sharp opposition from Sunni Arab and Kurdish leaders and caused a deadlock lasting months.
Leaders of the seven parties that make up the Shiite alliance agreed on al-Maliki's nomination in a meeting Friday evening, said Jalal Eddin al-Sagheer, a member of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the largest party in the alliance.
Al-Maliki won the nomination with agreement from six of the parties, said another SCIRI official, Ridha Jawad Taqi. The seventh party, Fadhila, had presented its own candidate, but only five of seven parties were needed to win a "consensus" agreement on a nominee.
The Shiite nominee is to be presented to a session of parliament on Saturday.
If Sunni Arab and Kurdish parties accept al-Maliki - and some have indicated they will - it could be a breakthrough in the two-month standoff that has prevented the forming of a national unity government.
Al-Maliki is one of the top figures in al-Jaafari's Dawa party and has often appeared as his spokesman. Still, little is known about him since he fled Iraq in the 1980s, settling in Syria and working in Dawa's political office. He returned to Iraq after the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.
SCIRI and other parties in the alliance had initially expressed opposition to al-Maliki because it feared he would be unacceptable to Sunni Arabs.
Al-Maliki was a top official in the commission in charge of purging members of Saddam's ousted Baath Party from the military and government. Sunnis, who made up the backbone of the Baath Party, consider the commission a means of squeezing them out of influence in post-Saddam Iraq.
But the Dawa party warned of further problems within the alliance if al-Maliki were rejected after Dawa leader al-Jaafari was forced to give up the nomination.
Sunnis appeared willing to take al-Maliki, after fiercely opposing a second term for al-Jaafari, who bowed out Thursday.
"If anyone is nominated except al-Jaafari, we won't put any obstacles in his way. He will receive our support," Adnan al-Dulaimi, head of the main Sunni Arab coalition in parliament, told The Associated Press.
Mahmoud Othman, a Kurdish lawmaker, said the Kurdish parties had no opposition to al-Maliki.
The Shiites are the biggest bloc in parliament but lack the strength to govern without Sunni and Kurdish partners. As the biggest bloc, the Shiites get first crack at the prime minister's job.
Al-Jaafari had held out for weeks against increasing pressure on him to step aside.
Sunni and Kurdish politicians blamed the rise of sectarian tensions on al-Jaafari for failing to rein in Shiite militias and Interior Ministry commandoes, accused by the Sunnis of harboring death squads. Those parties refused to join any government headed by al-Jaafari.
He stepped down after Iraq's most powerful Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, sent word that he should go, according to some lawmakers.
U.S officials are insisting that the Iraqis move quickly to form a new government to begin the task of confronting sectarian violence and the armed insurgency. The Bush administration hopes such a government will curb Iraq's slide toward anarchy and enable the U.S. to begin bringing home its 133,000 troops.
Edited by OwtOrNowt on 21-Apr-06 at 18:25
The oily one
windsorgolf
- 24 Apr 2006 08:42
- 2573 of 2700
up a bit.should see a nice up trend from now on
hampi_man
- 25 Apr 2006 09:13
- 2574 of 2700
Nice rise today, let's hope it continues above the 50p mark
TheMaster
- 25 Apr 2006 09:15
- 2575 of 2700
Moving up today due to last night's Evenning Standard business report stating:
'japanese conglomerate has agreed funding for exploration and production licence', which will make Petrel 100,000 bpd oil company.
windsorgolf
- 25 Apr 2006 09:54
- 2576 of 2700
up 9p,just the start of many great things to come
hampi_man
- 25 Apr 2006 10:11
- 2577 of 2700
TheMaster,
do you have a link to that story please?
Cheers
forest
- 25 Apr 2006 10:22
- 2578 of 2700
Just spent a good hour on Google looking for that report, can't find anything relating to post 2575. Anyone?
aldwickk
- 25 Apr 2006 10:27
- 2579 of 2700
Try another bb
greekman
- 25 Apr 2006 10:28
- 2580 of 2700
Iraq wants to raise oil exports to 1.8bn bpd from the current 1.5bn bpd by the end of 2006, Reuters quoted a ministry spokesperson as saying. Plans include the drilling of new wells, developing existing fields and repairing extraction stations.
Okay not a huge increase in output, but probably in the small time scale it's the best achievable aim. Even to reach this figure no doubt further contracts will have to be signed.
With Pet's connections and their ability employment strategy of employing locals they may well get a look in.
TheMaster
- 25 Apr 2006 10:29
- 2581 of 2700
I tore out the Petrel artical from the relevant newspaper and have this on my desk now!. Could scan and post on this BB, should someone tell me how to post?