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OIL AND GAS
U.N.: Iraqi, Kurdish oil deal good first step
by Daniel J. Graeber
Erbil, Iraq (UPI) Nov 14, 2014


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

An interim agreement to settle internal oil issues in Iraq was met with widespread praise, though the Kurdish government said it wasn't ceding control.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon congratulated the Iraqi central and semiautonomous Kurdish governments for finding an interim solution to oil budget and export stalemates brewing for roughly a decade.

Federal and regional authorities are called on "to build on this important first step and to solve all remaining outstanding issues within the framework of the constitution," he said in a Thursday statement.

A constitution implemented in 2006 says the federal State Oil Marketing Organization has exclusive control over petroleum exports, with the semiautonomous Kurdistan Regional Government taking 17 percent of all oil revenues.

There are disagreements, however, over what level of control KRG has over contracts and exploitation of oil reserves in its northern territory.

Baghdad under the terms of the deal pays $500 million to the Kurdish government, which places 150,000 barrels of oil produced from its territory per day at the disposal of the federal government in exchange.

Kurdish Prime Minister Nechirvan Barzani said, however, his government wouldn't be ceding control over the region's oil to SOMO. The federal government cannot export oil from northern Iraq without first involving their Kurdish counterparts.

Jen Psaki, spokesperson for a U.S. State Department vested in the dispute, said the steps were a welcome part of an effort to find a comprehensive solution to the impasse.

"The United States will continue to serve as a neutral broker and facilitator to the extent desired by the leadership of both Iraq and the KRG," she told reporters.


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US says air strikes cutting militants oil revenues
Washington (AFP) Nov 13, 2014
US air strikes are beginning to choke off the flow of oil revenues to Islamic militants, cutting their income by several million dollars a week, a top US official said Thursday. Last month, top US Treasury official David Cohen said the Islamic State group, also known as ISIL, was earning about $1 million a day from the black market sales of oil from fields it has seized in Syria and Iraq. ... read more


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