Mobile UPI  |   About UPI  |   UPI en Español  |   UPI Arabic  |   UPIU  |   My Account
Search:
Go

Iraqi MP: KRG oil law didn't help

A top Iraqi Parliamentarian said the Iraqi Kurdistan approval of a regional oil law set back the debate over a federal law.
|
|
 
  
Published: Sept. 6, 2007 at 10:24 AM
Advertisement

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- A top Iraqi parliamentarian said the Iraqi Kurdistan approval of a regional oil law set back the debate over a federal law.

Abdul-Hadi al-Hasani, deputy chair of the Parliament’s Energy Committee, said the deals the Kurdistan Regional Government signed with oil firms could be overturned by the federal government.

Iraq’s federal oil law has been held up by disputes over the extent of federal control over the oil sector and what role the private sector would play.

The Kurds, in the relatively peaceful north, have been urging movement as they try to capitalize on four plus years of economic development. They’ve signed a handful of oil deals with smaller, private firms, which raised ire in Baghdad, sparking threats from the Oil Ministry they wouldn’t be honored. Last month the KRG grew weary of waiting for Baghdad and approved its own version of a regional oil law, saying it would be in line with a version of the federal law the KRG agreed to in February.

“It did not help as much as hindrance,” Hasani said on the sidelines of the Iraq Oil, Gas, Petrochemical and Electricity Summit organized by the London-based Iraq Development Program. “We need one constitution, one law over everybody. It could wait and then we could see and then they could adopt the law which everybody had agreed on.”

Hasani claims the federal government has the right to void the KRG contracts, though that would likely make matters worse in terms of the investment scene in Iraq.

Sami al-Askari, parliamentarian and top adviser to the prime minister, said a federal oil and gas council that the law forms would decide whether to scrap the KRG deals.

Both parliamentarians said the private firms that signed deals with the KRG should not be blocked from winning contracts for the rest of Iraq.

--

Ben Lando, UPI Energy Editor

Topics: Abdul-Hadi al-Hasani, Ben Lando, Sami al-Askari
© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
  
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
Protesters, police clash at NATO summit Notable deaths of 2012 2012 Billboard Music Awards
The 137th Preakness Stakes Annual Solar eclipse occurs in U.S. Chen Guangcheng arrives in the U.S.
Additional Energy Resources Stories
1 of 29
Members of the Army's Old Guard place flags at Arlington National Ceremtery
View Caption
U.S. flags are seen in the rucksack of a soldier with the Army's 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment, The Old Guard, as he places flags at gravesites in Arlington National Cemetery as part of the Flags-In Memorial Day ceremony on May 24, 2012 in Arlington, Virginia. American flags were placed at each of the more than 220,000 grave markers in honor of those who served and Memorial Day. UPI/Kevin Dietshc
fark
Casey Anthony spends her days eating in front of the computer. No word on what her Fark handle is...
Rescue workers have to demolish part of house to get Britain's Got Tonnage winner to the hospital...
Fugitive penguin recaptured in Tokyo. Keepers are keen to return it to the Sea Life Park, but on...
Don't you just hate it when a bunch of heifers crash your party and drink all the beer?
Curt Schilling strikes out 300 employees
Photoshop these courtly cricket club members