Customer Logins

Obtain the data you need to make the most informed decisions by accessing our extensive portfolio of information, analytics, and expertise. Sign in to the product or service center of your choice.

Customer Logins

My Logins

All Customer Logins
S&P Global S&P Global Marketplace
Explore S&P Global

  • S&P Global
  • S&P Dow Jones Indices
  • S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • S&P Global Mobility
  • S&P Global Commodity Insights
  • S&P Global Ratings
  • S&P Global Sustainable1
Close
Discover more about S&P Global’s offerings
Investor Relations
  • Investor Relations Overview
  • Investor Presentations
  • Investor Fact Book
  • News Releases
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Executive Committee
  • Corporate Governance
  • Merger Information
  • Stock & Dividends
  • Shareholder Services
  • Contact Investor Relations
Languages
  • English
  • 中文
  • 日本語
  • 한국어
  • Português
  • Español
  • ไทย
About
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Email Subscription Center
  • Media Center
  • Glossary
Product Login
S&P Global S&P Global Market Intelligence Market Intelligence
  • Who We Serve
  • Solutions
  • News & Insights
  • Events
  • Product Login
  • Request Follow Up
  •  
    • Academia
    • Commercial Banking
    • Corporations
     
    • Government & Regulatory Agencies
    • Insurance
    • Investment & Global Banking
     
    • Investment Management
    • Private Equity
    • Professional Services
  • WORKFLOW SOLUTIONS
    • Capital Formation
    • Credit & Risk Solutions
    • Data & Distribution
    • Economics & Country Risk
    • Sustainability
    • Financial Technology
     
    • Issuer & IR Solutions
    • Lending Solutions
    • Post-Trade Processing
    • Private Markets
    • Risk, Compliance, & Reporting
    • Supply Chain
    PRODUCTS
    • S&P Capital IQ Pro
    • S&P Global Marketplace
    • China Credit Analytics
    • Climate Credit Analytics
    • Credit Analytics
    • RatingsDirect ®
    • RatingsXpress ®
    • 451 Research
    See More S&P Global Solutions
     
    • Capital Access
    • Corporate Actions
    • KY3P ®
    • EDM
    • PMI™
    • BD Corporate
    • Bond Pricing
    • ChartIQ
  • CONTENT
    • Latest Headlines
    • Special Features
    • Blog
    • Research
    • Videos
    • Infographics
    • Newsletters
    • Client Case Studies
    PODCASTS
    • The Decisive
    • IR in Focus
    • Masters of Risk
    • MediaTalk
    • Next in Tech
    • The Pipeline: M&A and IPO Insights
    • Private Markets 360°
    • Street Talk
    SEE ALL EPISODES
    SECTOR-SPECIFIC INSIGHTS
    • Differentiated Data
    • Banking & Insurance
    • Energy
    • Maritime, Trade, & Supply Chain
    • Metals & Mining
    • Technology, Media, & Telecoms
    • Investment Research
    • Sector Coverage
    • Consulting & Advisory Services
    More ways we can help
    NEWS & RESEARCH TOPICS
    • Credit & Risk
    • Economics & Country Risk
    • Financial Services
    • Generative AI
    • Maritime & Trade
    • M&A
    • Private Markets
    • Sustainability & Climate
    • Technology
    See More
    • All Events
    • In-Person
    • Webinars
    • Webinar Replays
    Featured Events
    Webinar2024 Trends in Data Visualization & Analytics
    • 10/17/2024
    • Live, Online
    • 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM EDT
    In PersonInteract New York 2024
    • 10/15/2024
    • Center415, 415 5th Avenue, New York, NY
    • 10:00 -17:00 CEST
    In PersonDatacenter and Energy Innovation Summit 2024
    • 10/30/2024
    • Convene Hamilton Square, 600 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20005, US
    • 7:30 AM - 5:00 PM ET
  • PLATFORMS
    • S&P Capital IQ Pro
    • S&P Capital IQ
    • S&P Global China Credit Analytics
    • S&P Global Marketplace
    OTHER PRODUCTS
    • Credit Analytics
    • Panjiva
    • Money Market Directories
     
    • Research Online
    • 451 Research
    • RatingsDirect®
    See All Product Logins
Same-Day Analysis

Iraqi Government to Invest US$2.5 bil. in Five Core Output-Raising Technical Service Contracts

Published: 24 March 2008
Iraq's government is hoping to sign five large initial two-year technical service contracts (TSCs) costing US$2.5 billion by the end of next month, eyeing incremental production gains of around 500,000 barrels per day (b/d), with five majors.

Global Insight Perspective

 

Significance

Iraq's government has allocated US$2 billion-2.5 billion for TSCs at five of its largest producing fields, spanning over two years and adding 500,000 b/d of production capacity.

Implications

BP, Shell, ExxonMobil, Chevron, and Total are in the process of formalising the contracts with the Oil Ministry. The two-year TSCs will be a model for the award of the remaining contracts, so prolonged negotiations with the five majors have delayed the simultaneous pre-qualification round until next month.

Outlook

No timeframe update for the added 500,000 b/d of production has yet been given and, although the majors are eager to get a foot in through the door, concerns about the security situation following the U.S. Army's surge wind-down and November’s U.S. presidential election might deter a rapid deployment.

Luring the Giants

Iraq's Oil Minister, Hussein al-Shahristani, has been preparing his government to allocate up to US$2.5 billion for five TSCs, each at one of Iraq's largest producing oilfields. The TSCs are planned to add 100,000 b/d of production capacity to each of the five fields and will run for a short two-year period, according to senior Iraqi Oil Ministry adviser, and former oil minister, Thamir Ghadban. It is hoped the contracts will be signed early next month and "there is a rough estimate that it could cost about US$400 million to US$500 million per field," Ghadban told Reuters in an interview, adding that "between US$2 billion and US$2.5 billion over two years…should be paid by the government to companies." As Global Insight reported recently, the Iraqi government is working out a framework where the companies could receive their pay in crude as well as trying to reach some guarantee that the TSCs will be converted into long-term production-sharing agreements (PSAs), when a national oil law so allows.

The TSC framework—allowing companies to come in and undertake development and production activities under a fee-based framework, instead of being able to book reserves like under a PSA set up—is being adopted because the Iraqi government has failed to push a national oil law through parliament. With Iraq lacking any regulatory framework for private participation and investment in its oil sector, allowing TSCs under the old pre-2003 invasion laws is the only tangible option left for the government in order to obtain know-how and new technologies. Iraq's own state-owned operators have suffered from a long and disastrous “brain drain” and the remaining workforce have missed decades of technological development in the oil industry because of the long period of under-investment under the former regime, as well as wars and sanctions.

Iraq's Pilot Technical Service Contracts

Operator

Partner

Field

BP

-

South Rumaila

Chevron

Total

West Qurna

ExxonMobil

-

Zubair

Shell

-

Kirkuk

Shell

BHP Billiton

Maysan

As Iraq, five years after the 2003 invasion, has managed to lift its oil production to pre-war levels, mainly by restoring above-surface production infrastructure and securing the northern Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline export route from sabotage, new technologies are needed to obtain further incremental rises. Reservoir management programmes need to be launched, new wells need to be drilled, and many existing wells need workovers. Enhanced oil recovery (EOR) schemes need to be put in place and much of the infrastructure—some of it dating back to the 1930s-50s—should be exchanged for modern technologies.

A comprehensive licensing round to hand out TSCs for most of Iraq's oil fields is under way, with more then 70 IOCs having registered themselves for pre-qualification The prolonged negotiations with the majors over the first five pilot contracts seem to have delayed the pre-qualification process for up to another month, however, from an original planned date of late March. This licensing round is, however, being spearheaded by the issuing of the first five TSCs for Iraq's largest fields to five of the world's largest majors, with each of the contracts being expected to result in the incremental output rise mentioned by Ghadban above. The rather small cost per contract is evidence of the comparatively small investments needed to secure production rises in Iraq; an alternative view is that it represents over-optimism on behalf of the Oil Ministry.

Glorious Future, Gloomy Present

Although Iraq has managed to restore oil production to its pre-invasion levels recently—levels that were very low as a result of international sanctions and under-investment—the lack of progress on almost any of the more complex issues facing the hydrocarbons sector is staggering. Apart from the lack of a proper legal framework, the Iraqi Oil Ministry has failed to invest anything in the acquisition of new technology, completely relying on IOCs to bring that to the table when international investment gets under way. Investment has, however, not been secured, as the national oil law has stalled in parliament for over a year and become a hotly contested issue between the country's leading factions.

Under the TSCs, the government will have to pay upfront fees for new technology being implemented and, although many of the majors have been running goodwill training courses for Oil Ministry personnel, technology transfers take time and require well-functioning organisations to be successful. The total price tag of US$2.5 billion for the five two-year contracts adding 500,000 b/d of production does not sound in any way comparable to other enhanced oil recovery, drilling, workover, and production infrastructure projects internationally, especially when taking globally spiralling contracting and raw material costs into the equation. On top of that, the companies will need to be compensated for their extensive security arrangements, further lifting their operational costs, and, lacking an oil law properly regulating their rights and obligations, the companies will be cautious to make any substantial financial outlays themselves without being reimbursed.

Outlook and Implications

The history of miscalculation and over-optimistic targets emanating from the Oil Ministry over the past few years has, unsurprisingly, failed to build confidence among industry executives about the majors' ability to operate in Iraq. A shaky legal situation exposes the companies to every major change of political direction and the contentiousness of the drafted oil law further undermines any guarantees from the current government of the TSCs being converted to PSAs further down the line.

The security situation in Iraq is another serious problem still to be overcome. Although the violence levels have been falling sharply, this has been attributed to the U.S. Army surge, which is set to be wound down by mid-year, when the additional U.S. troops will be sent home. The majors will want to evaluate the ensuing security situation before risking their personnel and assets, as well as the resulting political climate following the creation of several new armed Sunni factions, which the Shi'a-dominated government might try to incorporate into the national security forces. The U.S. presidential election in November 2008 will be another big worry, with the possibility of an eventual U.S. withdrawal being viewed with great uncertainty.

Iraq probably offers the largest and most easily accessible hydrocarbon opportunities anywhere in the world for the majors, and they are naturally keen not to miss out on contracts being signed. Under the TSCs they will, however, not gain stakes in the reserves; hence, lowering their willingness to take risks. An incremental production rise of 500,000 b/d is clearly feasible, although previously aired Oil Ministry hopes that this should be reached by end-2008 seem over-optimistic. So does the US$2.5-billion price tag, which indicates a failure to understand Iraq's operating difficulties as well as the globally inflated costs of construction, technology, and know-how, which will needed to bring production at the five key fields up to international standards.

Additional Reading:

Iraq: 14 March 2008: Iraq's Oil-Contract Awarding Schedule Seen to Slip Again

Iraq: 5 March 2008: IOCs to Receive Crude as Compensation Under Provisional Iraqi Service Contracts

Iraq: 5 March 2008: Oil Minister Expects Additional 500,000 b/d of Iraqi Production Onstream Before End-2008

Iraq: 19 February 2008: Over 70 IOCs Register Interest for Iraqi Major Oilfields' Tenders

Iraq: 8 February 2008: Shell Tempts Iraq with Floating LNG Plant Proposal

Iraq: 1 February 2008: Shell Works on Iraq Gas Master Plan, Exports, but Needs Oil Law

Iraq: 25 January 2008: Oil Minister Airs Hopes for 400,000 b/d of Added Iraqi Oil Production in 2008

Iraq: 3 January 2008: Oil Ministry Looks to Pre-Qualify Foreign Bidders for Iraq Oil Licensing Round

Iraq: 30 November 2007: Oil Ministry Outlines Strategy; Eyes 1-mil.-b/d Iraqi Output Boost by 2010

Iraq: 28 November 2007: Oil Ministry to Start Meeting Round with Majors over Forthcoming Iraqi Service Contracts
Related Content
  • Energy Industry Analysis, Forecasts, and Data
{"items" : [ {"name":"share","enabled":true,"desc":"<strong>Share</strong>","mobdesc":"Share","options":[ {"name":"facebook","url":"https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fcountry-industry-forecasting.html%3fid%3d106596996","enabled":true},{"name":"twitter","url":"https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fcountry-industry-forecasting.html%3fid%3d106596996&text=Iraqi+Government+to+Invest+US%242.5+bil.+in+Five+Core+Output-Raising+Technical+Service+Contracts","enabled":true},{"name":"linkedin","url":"https://www.linkedin.com/sharing/share-offsite/?url=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fcountry-industry-forecasting.html%3fid%3d106596996","enabled":true},{"name":"email","url":"?subject=Iraqi Government to Invest US$2.5 bil. in Five Core Output-Raising Technical Service Contracts&body=http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fcountry-industry-forecasting.html%3fid%3d106596996","enabled":true},{"name":"whatsapp","url":"https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=Iraqi+Government+to+Invest+US%242.5+bil.+in+Five+Core+Output-Raising+Technical+Service+Contracts http%3a%2f%2fwww.spglobal.com%2fmarketintelligence%2fen%2fmi%2fcountry-industry-forecasting.html%3fid%3d106596996","enabled":true}]}, {"name":"rtt","enabled":true,"mobdesc":"Top"} ]}
Filter Sort
  • About S&P Global Market Intelligence
  • Quality Program
  • Email Subscription Center
  • Media Center
  • Our Values
  • Investor Relations
  • Contact Customer Care & Sales
  • Careers
  • Our History
  • News Releases
  • Support by Division
  • Corporate Responsibility
  • Ventures
  • Quarterly Earnings
  • Report an Ethics Concern
  • Leadership
  • Press
  • SEC Filings & Reports
  • Office Locations
  • IOSCO ESG Rating & Data Product Statements
  • © 2025 S&P Global
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookie Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclosures
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information