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ECONOMY - Oil Benefits Will Flow to U.S. from Iraq - Experts

Emad Mekay

WASHINGTON, Feb 27 (IPS) - A U.S. invasion of Iraq would guarantee 
long term oil supply for the U.S. economy, guard against oil 
exporting countries ever using the energy source to influence U.S. 
foreign policy and could also benefit U.S. oil companies, analysts 
here say.

''When the U.S. goes to Iraq, we are not only talking about just 
profit (for U.S. oil companies) here but we are also talking about 
(oil) control,'' said Steve Kretzmann, an oil industry analyst with 
the Institute of Policy Studies.

''Who's controlling the tap and who's got their hands on the spigots 
is what really matters. It (the potential U.S. war in Iraq) has 
everything to do with oil,'' he said.

Kretzmann was reacting to statements Wednesday by U.S. President 
George W. Bush denying that Washington is attacking Iraq for oil, as 
millions of anti-war protesters shouted during demonstrations earlier 
in February.

''We will seek to protect Iraq's natural resources from sabotage by a 
dying regime,'' said Bush, ''and ensure those resources are used for 
the benefit of the owners: the Iraqi people''.

But Kretzmann says the idea that a U.S.-led force would wage war, and 
possibly house-to-house fighting, to help the Iraqi people is 
''hilarious''.

''I think that saying oil has nothing to do with the war is 
ludicrous,'' Kretzmann said. ''On the face of it, oil has everything 
to do with the politics of the region and it has for the last 60 
years.''

With increasingly tense relations between Saudi Arabia, the biggest 
oil exporter to the United States, Washington policy strategists are 
evidently scrambling to wean dependence on Riyadh for the precious 
energy source, said another oil analyst, Michael Renner of the 
Washington-based Worldwatch Institute.

Combine that with mounting fear that the Arab kingdom may fall into 
the hands of extremists, who would be more prepared to use oil as a 
weapon against Washington, and it makes controlling Iraqi oil the 
only viable alternative for the oil-sensitive Bush administration, 
which is backed by conservative strategists who fear a repetition of 
the Arab-led oil embargo in 1973.

''The final solution to that fear is installing an American 
client-state in Iraq,'' said Kretzmann. ''All of a sudden you'll have 
a lot more buffer to might happen with Saudi Arabia.''

Last year Iran, Libya, and Iraq, all members of the Organisation of 
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), said they wanted to use oil to 
press Israel and, and its major ally the United States, to stop their 
crackdown on the Palestinians.

Saudi Arabia has one-fourth of the world's proven oil reserves, 
according to industry figures, and supplied the United States with 18 
percent of its foreign oil last year.

Industry executives expect worldwide crude oil demand, approximately 
75 million barrels per day now, to reach 90 million barrels a day or 
more by 2010.

Last September's terrorist attacks in the United States fuelled 
renewed calls for Washington to decrease its reliance on Middle East 
oil by pursuing production in Russia, the Caspian basin, West Africa, 
and Alaska - but production from those areas combined would not 
compensate for oil from the Middle East.

''The fact of the matter is that if you look over time, the next 
30-50 years, Iraq will be strategically important for years to come 
and that importance is going to increase as other reserves around the 
world deplete,'' Kretzmann said.

While controlling Iraqi oil could be strategically vital, U.S. oil 
companies could also benefit from the steady flow of Iraqi oil and 
its unrivalled cheap production costs.

''I think that to the extent that you have a country with a lot of 
cheap high-quality oil, that at least potentially represents an 
enormous competitive advantage vis-ˆ-vis someone who doesn't have 
access to that oil,'' Renner said.

Iraq's production cost could be, in some places, as cheap as one 
dollar per barrel while in Texas it can cost as much as 20 dollars 
per barrel.

''With low production costs relative to world market price, obviously 
there's a whole more money to be divided up than somewhere in the 
U.S. or the North Sea where it's far more expensive to produce oil in 
the first place,'' added Renner.

The analysts agree that once Iraqi oil is back on the market, U.S. 
oil field services companies like Halliburton, would be the first to 
benefit from reconstruction of Iraq's oil facilities, suffering from 
neglect following the 1991 Gulf War and 12 years under devastating 
United Nations sanctions.

In the long term, oil companies like Texaco, Chevron and ExxonMobil 
could be making billions of dollars once the Iraqi oil industry is 
open for them.

To pay for the massive rebuilding, a post-sanctions Iraq would need 
to maximize its oil output, with some experts estimating that Baghdad 
could produce 8-10 million barrels per day within a decade and 
eventually perhaps as much as 12 million.

''It certainly is in the billions of dollars worth of profit,'' 
Renner said of potential profits for the companies. ''But it's hard 
to tell how much exactly they are going to make because it'll all 
depend on the contracts.''

But while acknowledging that oil would play a role in the war, 
Michael Mussa, an economist with the prestigious Washington-based 
Institute for International Economics, says that it is not only U.S. 
companies that will benefit from a steady flow of oil form Iraq.

''A more stable supply of oil out of Iraq is going to be globally 
beneficial because it will mean presumably a lower price and a more 
stable price and oil consumers will benefit from it,'' Mussa said.

Philip Verleger, an energy market analyst with the Council on Foreign 
Relations, predicted that oil companies, which cannot recoup 
investments when prices are low, might not make huge profits in Iraq.

''I don't see it because if the Iraqi oil comes on, the risk that 
accompanies big companies like Exxon, is that the Saudis could get 
mad, bring prices down. Six months of very low oil prices would wipe 
out many times over any of the economic benefits of going into Iraq.''


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