China
Will Soon Be Drilling A Third Of Iraq’s Oil
30
March, 2013
10
years after the invasion of Baghdad, major American oil companies are
staying away from investing in Iraq’s oil resources, McClatchy’s
Sean Cockerham reports.
Instead,
many of Iraq’s newest oil fields are now controlled by Chinese.
Iraq possesses the second-largest oil deposit in the world, in the West Qurna region. Forbes says the country could easily become the second-largest oil producer in the world after Saudi Arabia.
Only
Exxon and Occidental have active stakes in Iraqi oil fields. The
reason for America’s relative absence, Cockerham writes, is that
the country is still too unstable.
Chinese
firms don’t seem to mind that as much, he says: one third of
all future Iraqi oil production is expected to come from
Chinese-owned fields.
There
are in fact many U.S. drillers, including Halliburton, operating in
the fields themselves, Cockerham notes.
But
folks like Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Suncor are nowhere to be
seen.
This
does not mean the U.S. is not receiving zero oil from Iraq. We still
import more than 173 million barrels of oil from there a year.
But
that’s actually not all that much — about
4.4 per cent of our entire import base,
according to EIA data.
And
that’s down from about 10 years ago — once the country’s
economy came back online — when we were taking in 240 million bby.
It’s
certainly not the situation many predicted we’d be in in 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.