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Carving up the Middle East's resources

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  • Carving up the Middle East's resources

    Financial Times (London, England)
    April 14, 2005 Thursday
    London Edition 1

    Carving up the Middle East's resources

    By JAMES DRUMMOND


    If the birth and tortured early history of Iraq's oil industry are
    any guide, the omens for foreign investment in the country's
    hydrocarbon sector are not great.

    The full scale of the country's potential became apparent in 1927
    when the Baba Gurgur 1 well outside Kirkuk in northern Iraq flowed at
    95,000 barrels of oil a day.

    By then, the country had become the scene of operations of the
    infamous Calouste Gulbenkian, an Armenian trader born in Istanbul who
    founded the Turkish Petroleum Company and became known as Mr Five Per
    Cent because that was his share of TPC.

    In its first incarnation, the other shareholders in the TPC were
    Anglo-Persian - better known today as British Petroleum - Royal
    Dutch/Shell and Deutsche Bank. After the First World War, Deutsche
    lost its stake.

    Subsequently, the CFP, the French state-owned oil company, and the
    Near East Development Company, consisting of Standard Oil of New York
    and Standard Oil of New Jersey, joined the consortium.

    The Turkish Petroleum Company then morphed into the Iraq Petroleum
    Company but not before Gulbenkian had committed his partners in the
    TPC to the famous Red Line agreement in 1928.

    Under the accord, none of the TPC partners was allowed to invest
    inside a specified area without the agreement of the others.

    The area was massive, covering most of the area of the old Ottoman
    empire. It included Turkey in the north but excluded Kuwait and Iran.
    Gulbenkian thus had an effective veto on investment by many of the
    world's leading oil companies in what became the most lucrative oil
    play in the world.

    The veto earned him a fortune and obstructed the US attempts to
    exploit Middle East oil.

    In its first incarnation, the Turkish Petroleum Company had secured a
    concession in Iraq until 2000 in which the company paid royalties to
    the Iraq government of just 15 cents a barrel. The concession was
    unilaterally revoked in the early 1960s by the radical government of
    Abdel Karim Qassim that ousted the monarchy.
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