St.
Petersburg (Reuters)—Russian oil major Rosneft has agreed to explore and
develop five fields in Iraq's Kurdistan as the company seeks to become a key
player in one of the world's newest and fastest-growing oil provinces.
Kremlin-controlled
Rosneft this year became the first oil major to pre-finance Kurdish crude
exports, an activity long dominated by trading houses, which bankrolled the
semi-autonomous region amid its fight against Islamic State and a budget crisis
caused by low oil prices.
On
Friday, Rosneft and the Kurdistan government signed production-sharing deals
for five oil blocks, with Rosneft saying it would also aim to explore for gas
in the future.
Igor
Sechin, Rosneft chief executive and a close ally of Russian President Vladimir
Putin, said the company was widening cooperation with Kurdistan following the
first direct purchases of Kurdish oil for Rosneft's German refineries earlier
this year.
Increased
feedstock access. "The agreements...set an example of well-weighed
investments in one of the key Middle East regions, which will make it possible
for the company to expand its exploration and production geography, provide
feedstock for Rosneft's growing refining network and raise profitability of our
international assets," Mr. Sechin said.
Iraq
has long opposed Kurdish independent oil sales, but has lately eased its stance
amid joint efforts by the regional government and Baghdad to defeat Islamic
State.
Rosneft
and Kurdistan also said they had agreed on the "monetization of the export
oil pipeline in Kurdistan," with Rosneft getting access to the regional
transportation system, which has throughput capacity of 700 Mbpd.
By
the end of 2017, Kurdistan plans to expand the pipeline to 1 MMbpd, or 1% of
global output, betting on the arrival of new volumes from fresh developments.
Kurdish
oil production has been mainly led in recent years by mid-sized firms,
including Genel. Larger companies such as ExxonMobil and Chevron are still in
the exploratory stage and have recently returned some blocks to Kurdistan after
disappointing searches.
Rosneft
said the deals signed would allow it to talk about "full entry in one of
the most promising regions of the developing global energy market.” Kurdistan
estimates its recoverable reserves at 45 Bbbl of oil and 5.66 Tm3 of gas.
Source:
www.oilpro.com
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