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..
forest
- 07 Dec 2006 11:58
- 2658 of 2700
Something brewing?
steveo
- 07 Dec 2006 12:08
- 2659 of 2700
Maestro, you are off your rocker
2517GEORGE
- 07 Dec 2006 12:09
- 2660 of 2700
Not before time, but looks that way forest.
2517
forest
- 07 Dec 2006 12:22
- 2661 of 2700
37% up still climbing.
TheMaster
- 21 Dec 2006 12:42
- 2662 of 2700
Iraqi government cabinet news leak today, when this is known to the market this will fly later today.
http://www.kurdmedia.com/news.asp?id=13786
windsorgolf
- 21 Dec 2006 14:30
- 2663 of 2700
TheMaster - 21 Dec 2006 12:42 - 2662 of 2662
AGREED...NEWS ON THE WAY...WAS WATCHING GERMAN FINANCE CHANNEL AND THEY ARE VERY BULLISH ON PET...MERRY CHRISTMAS
TheMaster
- 22 Dec 2006 12:25
- 2664 of 2700
More good news from Iraq today, PET will prosper from now on
forest
- 22 Dec 2006 14:05
- 2665 of 2700
And the news is........................
TheMaster
- 28 Dec 2006 15:44
- 2666 of 2700
Good news coming later today on Iraq form Mr Bush
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/6214109.stm
windsorgolf
- 02 Jan 2007 14:26
- 2667 of 2700
its getting ready to fly boys
Paperbackwriter
- 08 Jan 2007 08:33
- 2668 of 2700
What, no posts on this exciting day for Pet?
2517GEORGE
- 08 Jan 2007 08:51
- 2669 of 2700
PBW--- there are two threads on the go, nice increase so far today.
2517
forest
- 17 Feb 2007 17:16
- 2670 of 2700
............
maestro
- 18 Feb 2007 22:45
- 2671 of 2700
massive rise tomoro...news leaked friday and the city boys were piling in
forest
- 25 Feb 2007 13:58
- 2672 of 2700
From the Independent today. Looking very good.
Oil bonanza stays in Western sights after cosmetic change to Iraqi deals
By Tim Webb
Published: 25 February 2007
The final draft of Iraq's controversial hydrocarbons law has been submitted to the Iraqi Cabinet ahead of its presentation to Parliament for ratification next month.
Iraqi officials have attempted to defuse the backlash caused by last month's revelation in The Independent on Sunday that the law would grant foreign oil companies a large slice of the country's oil reserves.
The final draft has quietly dropped the term "production-sharing contracts" used in earlier drafts. These contracts involve energy companies paying for the initial investment in an oil field but reaping bigger returns if their gamble pays off.
The proposed introduction of production-sharing agreements in Iraq is controversial because they are usually used in challenging regions where oil is difficult and expensive to access, such as the Amazon. By contrast, much of Iraq's 112 billion barrels of proven oil reserves - the second-largest in the world - has already been discovered and is cheap to drill.
But the draft, seen exclusively by The Independent on Sunday, still proposes handing over exploration and production contracts for up to 32 years - far longer than most deals between companies and goveernments.
The draft empowers the new Federal Oil and Gas Council to set the exact terms of each contract, but given Iraq's parlous economy and security uncertainties, the terms offered are likely to be very generous. Greg Muttitt, a campaigner from lobby group Platform, said: "This is a huge amount of time. If contracts are signed in the coming months... there will be a massive risk premium, and the Iraqi side would be negotiating from a position of extreme weakness. As a result, the terms would be highly profitable for the companies, and Iraqis would be unable to change them for 20 years."
Other differences between previous drafts include the omission of a requirement for the terms of each contract to be published within two months. Now, according to Article 36, only non-specified "financially significant" details need be published, and no timeframe is given.
Iraqi unions have expressed their opposition to the proposed law. In a speech earlier this month to a conference, Hassan Jumaa, head of the Federation of Oil Unions, said: "We strongly warn all the foreign companies and foreign capital in the form of American companies against coming into our lands under the guise of production-sharing agreements."
Foreign oil firms already operating in Iraq are anxious not to antagonise unions as some may have links to insurgents who could target oil installations.
David Horgan, managing director of Petrel Resources, an AIM-listed oil company focused on Iraq, said contracts could be renegotiated by the government.
"The term 'production-sharing agreement' used in previous drafts has been dropped because of the controversy the term caused. They have built quite a lot of flexibility into the law. It makes sense to reward companies who start work now when the security situation is bad. The terms can always be made less attractive in a few years when things calm down."
He added that the Iraqi government had changed its approach in recent weeks over the hydrocarbons law. Rather than trying to force it through, particularly in the face of opposition from the Kurds in the north seeking more control over their oil resources, officials have attempted to achieve consensus within government, he said.
Last weekend, past and present officials from the oil ministry met in a hotel in Jordan to hammer out the draft's final details.
cynic
- 25 Feb 2007 15:51
- 2673 of 2700
history shows that the following sweeping statement taken from the above article, is bold in the extreme ..... "As a result, the terms would be highly profitable for the companies, and Iraqis would be unable to change them for 20 years" ...... believe that and you'll believe anything, which is not say that PET is not a good bet, though i have no view on the matter.
windsorgolf
- 25 Feb 2007 16:37
- 2674 of 2700
Forest,,,yes things looking better and better for our PET...one of the best oil plays around
Troys
- 25 Feb 2007 18:25
- 2675 of 2700
Should be very interesting from here on.
windsorgolf
- 25 Feb 2007 21:11
- 2676 of 2700
Troys...yes,very
oilyrag
- 26 Feb 2007 07:08
- 2677 of 2700
Until the Iraqs kidnap your crews and burn your wells. There is NO stability in the country and you lot think you can take their life blood. Time will tell.