US puts 1.14-billion-dollar price on restoring Iraqi oil Tuesday,
05-Aug-2003 3:22PM      Story from AFP / David Williams
Copyright 2003 by Agence France-Presse (via ClariNet)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

WASHINGTON, Aug 5 (AFP) - The price of restoring Iraq's oil and gas industry
is about 1.14 billion dollars and rising amid sabotage and looting,
according to a detailed, official plan received Tuesday.

The bulk of the costs -- 652 million dollars in total -- was related to two
major contracts already put out to tender for reviving oil fields in the
north and south of Iraq, the 33-page final work plan showed.

Other areas needing repair included gas facilities, the distribution network
and refineries.

The plan was drawn up by officials of the Iraqi Ministry of Oil, Coalition
Provisional Authority, the US Army Corps of Engineers and contractor Kellogg
Brown and Root (KBR).

The officials met in Baghdad from July 6 to 9 and considered two reports:
one by the Iraqi oil ministry and one by a US Army Corps of Engineers task
force.

"Both plans considered not only actual damage from the war but also post-war
looting, damage and sabotage," said an executive summary of the final work
plan for restoring the Iraqi oil industry to its pre-war state.

Iraq's oil infrastructure had been further degraded since the plan was
discussed, however, it said.

"Of particular note are the continued and continuing attacks on pipelines
and the electrical grid which services production, refining, processing and
distribution facilities," the summary said.

"The attacks continue to lengthen the time required and increase the cost to
restore production capacity."

Security remains precarious in parts of Iraq.

A KBR employee was killed Tuesday when his truck hit an anti-tank mine while
on a routine mail run from central to northern Iraq, KBR said in a
statement.

And a section of a pipeline from the oil-rich northern city of Kirkuk was
blown up on Thursday, although officials there played down its impact.

Last month, the US Army Corps of Engineers said it would issue one contract
for rebuilding the fields in the north of Iraq and another for the south,
each worth from 500,000 dollars to a maximum 500 million dollars.

The work is open to US and eligible foreign companies, replacing a
controversial no-bid contract doled out to KBR, a subsidiary of
Halliburton -- a company run by US Vice President Dick Cheney from 1995 to
2000.

The Army Corps of Engineers had come under fire over its granting of the
Iraqi oil contract on March 8 to KBR without putting it out to tender. The
Corps argued that the KBR contract was an emergency measure.

An overview of the new project execution plan said Iraqi oil ministry
operating companies would have overall responsibility for the work.

But KBR would still help procure commodities needed in restoration, act as a
consultant for some projects and undertake engineer-procure-construct
contract work itself for "a small number of selected projects."

According to the plan, the total costs for a North Oil Company were
estimated at about 320 million dollars, and for a South Oil Company, 332
million dollars.

Costs for a Northern Gas Company were 32 million dollars, and for a Southern
Gas Company 24 million dollars.

Repairs of downstream facilities such as distribution would cost 149 million
dollars, and refineries another 43 million dollars.

Restoration costs were estimated at 132 million dollars for the Iraq
Drilling Company, 68 million dollars for the Oil Exploration Company, and 44
million dollars for State Company Oil Projects.

The final work plan was released by the Army Corps of Engineers among
documents made available to bidders for the two major Iraqi oil restoration
contracts.

djw/mac

US-Iraq-oil

Reply via email to