Iraq water injection project cost above $10 bln
Project to help boost production rates from fields.
September 22, 2010 8:52 by Reuters
A water injection project to help boost production rates from Iraq’s southern oilfields is expected to exceed $10 billion, Iraq’s government spokesman said on Tuesday.
Iraq’s cabinet approved a plan on Tuesday to repay the cost of the scheme to the international oil companies that would need to initially fund the project, government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told Reuters.
Iraq still needs to negotiate how to make the repayment, which will be taken from Iraq’s future oil revenues, he said.
“This we need to negotiate with them. It depends on how to make the repayment structure, because it is huge amount. It will affect the revenue of Iraq,” said Dabbagh after the weekly cabinet meeting.
U.S. oil major ExxonMobil had said it was taking the lead among oil companies that won development contracts for southern oilfields in two auctions last year, in coordinating initial studies for the project.
The cost of the project would be distributed among those majors, an Iraqi oil official said in April.
The water injection scheme could help raise extraction rates at Iraq’s southern oilfields such as West Qurna, Majnoon, Zubair, and Rumaila. The fields are being developed by oil majors such as BP Plc ,, Royal Dutch Shell , Lukoil , China’s CNPC and Eni of Italy .
Water injection helps to increase the amount of crude that can be pumped from oilfields and will be a key to enabling the oil firms to reach ambitious production targets set in the oilfield development contracts.
The project aims to produce 10-15 million bpd of water and would use seawater, an Exxon executive told Reuters in July.
(Reporting by Rania El Gamal; Editing by Sue Thomas)
More on GCC
-
Online Learning On The Rise
-
Saudi’s Sipchem picks HSBC as adviser for Sahara merger
-
KOHLER Raids Counterfeit Center, Destroys Over 700 Products
-
Saudi Arabia Says MERS Coronavirus Kills Four More
-
Qatar Airways expands fleet
-
Qatar tightens caps on banks’ securities investment
-
Abu Dhabi’s Waha Capital Buys Stake In Healthcare Firm
-
Saudi Arabia plans to block WhatsApp within weeks
-
MERS coronavirus claims another life
-
Back to pre-crisis peak
-
Nokia Lumia 720 launches ‘Man of Steel’ campaign
-
Dubai World unit sells UK asset to Brookfield
-
UAE banks ask to permit loan transfers for Emiratis
-
Indonesians protest at Jeddah consulate
-
UAE Regulator To Allow Trading In Share Offer Rights
-
Citigroup To Exit UAE Interbank Rate Setting Panel
-
World’s largest mall to get bigger
-
Mediaquest acquires AME Info and SME Info
-
Emaar Plans JV With Dubai Holding For New Project
-
Global damage of corruption
Lately on Kipp
-
Mile-high tower fit for a prince
-
CompTIA Middle East Research Reveals Focus on IT Recruitment to Boost Business Competitiveness and Security
-
Shift in strategy since acquisition – Paul Kenny
-
Online Learning On The Rise
-
Saudi’s Sipchem picks HSBC as adviser for Sahara merger
-
Alcatel-Lucent Enterprises announces Data Centre & LAN Infrastructure Agreement with Jumbo Electronics
Sharjah Police: ‘Don’t give money to beggars’
Fighting the world’s biggest killer
Twist and shout
Smoking with child in car banned
“Your customers aren’t fools”
Behind the curtain of Simone Heng
Chatting with the man behind Dubai City Pass
A business discussion with the author of ‘Connect The Dots’
































