Iraq
discovers oil in Kurdistan
AFP
ARBIL
Petroleumworld.com
04 10 06
Iraq announced the discovery Saturday of oil reserves in the mountainous
Kurdish region of Zakho, close to its border with Turkey.
"We have discovered oil at Zakho, 470 kilometers (292 miles) north
of Baghdad," announced Iraq's deputy oil minister Motassam Akram.
He said the oil wells were drilled by a Norwegian company, DNO and added
that the actual crude reserves would be known "soon".
In March, the Kurdish authorities had announced the signing of a contract
with a Canadian company, Western Oil Sands, to survey the region of
Garmain, 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of Sulaimaniyah.
Most of Iraq's crude reserves are in Shiite-dominated southern regions
and are exported through the two southern terminals. Exports from Iraq's
northern fields around Kirkuk, just south of Kurdistan, have effectively
been shut down by insurgent attacks.
The self-rule Kurdish region, which groups the provinces of Sulaimaniyah,
Arbil and Dohuk, has a small number of oil fields.
In 2005, the country lost 6.25 billion dollars in oil revenues due to
sustained insurgent attacks on its oil infrastructure.
AFP 04 08 06 1502 GMT
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