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OIL AND GAS
China to relocate some workers in oil supplier Iraq: ministry
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 19, 2014


U.S. hasn't seen any major problems with Iraqi oil despite mounting violence
Washington (UPI) Jun 19, 2013 - Though the situation in Iraq requires constant monitoring, there's been no major disruption to its crude oil exports, a U.S. State Department spokeswoman said.

Militants with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria laid siege to a key oil refinery in Baiji, about 130 miles north of the Iraqi capital.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said during a regular press briefing production was shut down at the refinery for several days before the attack. The closure of the refinery, which feeds the domestic market, means Iraq may have to import some energy supplies for neighboring countries, though exports aren't limited.

"There's no impact on Iraq's crude oil exports, and we haven't seen any major disruptions in oil supplies in Iraq," she said. "But we're certainly constantly monitoring the global oil supply and demand situation."

The growing Sunni insurgency has sparked fears about the stability of global oil markets that rely in part on Iraq's supplies.

In a report Monday, auto club AAA said the conflict in Iraq was influencing U.S. retail gasoline prices. Prices at the pump normally decline in June, though AAA said the turmoil in Iraq is likely going to prevent that from happening.

ISIS took control of parts of Iraq last week. In a weekly report on petroleum, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said the United States imported on average 468,000 barrels of oil from Iraq during the week ending June 13. That was an increase of 16,000 bpd from the previous week.

Iraq army controls refinery but militants fight on: staff
Baghdad (AFP) June 19, 2014 - Government forces were in control of Iraq's biggest oil refinery on Thursday but insurgents were still inside the complex and sporadic clashes persisted, staff said.

Sunni Arab militants had stormed the complex in Baiji, south of Iraq's militant-held second city Mosul, on Wednesday, setting fire to several storage tanks for refined products in a move that sent jitters through world oil markets.

"Clashes stopped at about midnight (2100 GMT Wednesday), but keep breaking out again from time to time," Dhahi al-Juburi, an employee trapped inside the sprawling complex told AFP by telephone.

"Iraqi forces are still inside the refinery, and they control it," he said, adding that "insurgents are still in several places in the refinery, and even in some towers."

Another employee inside Baiji refinery, who spoke on condition of anonymity, echoed Juburi's account.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's security spokesman Lieutenant General Qassem Atta, however, told state television earlier on Thursday that the refinery was fully in government hands and that the militant assault had been repelled.

The offensive, spearheaded by jihadists but also involving supporters of ousted Sunni Arab dictator Saddam Hussein, began in Mosul, a city of some two million people, on June 9 and has advanced within 60 kilometres (40 miles) of Baghdad.

Security forces generally performed poorly when faced with the initial assault, in some cases shedding uniforms and abandoning vehicles to flee.

They seem to have recovered at least somewhat from the shock of the onslaught, gaining ground in some areas, but militants have made advances elsewhere.

China is to relocate some workers in Iraq -- where it is the biggest foreign investor in the oil industry -- in the face of spreading violence, the foreign ministry said Thursday.

Militants from the jihadist group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) have captured vast amounts of Iraqi territory in a lightning offensive that is entering its second week, prompting major international concern..

"For those Chinese workers in areas where the security situation is relatively grave we will do all that we can to help them evacuate to safer areas," said Beijing's foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying.

"Wherever is safer they will be moved to there," she added at a regular briefing.

China has more than 10,000 workers on a wide range of projects in the Middle Eastern country, officials say, although most are in the south, far from the current fighting.

Hua's comments came after state-run media reports that major Chinese oil firms have prepared evacuation plans in case the assault threatens their operations, highlighting the risks to energy supplies for the Asian giant.

"If insurgents begin to attack Baghdad, we will pull out of the country immediately," an employee of Chinese state-owned energy giant China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) told the Global Times newspaper.

Resources are a key interest for China, the world's second-largest economy, and Iraq is its fifth-largest source of crude oil imports, while China is the largest foreign investor in Iraq's oil sector.

While Beijing has diversified its supply in recent years, it has suffered significant disruptions due to unrest in South Sudan, Libya and elsewhere.

"The Chinese national oil companies have been investing dangerously for over a decade, and they need to now increase efforts to diversity their overseas investments towards more stable countries," said Luke Patey, an expert on the international expansion of Chinese and Indian national oil firms.

Production at the four Iraqi oil fields of PetroChina, the listed arm of China's largest oil producer China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), has not been affected, a company representative told the Global Times.

- 'Contingency plans' -

But Patey, author of "The New Kings of Crude", a book examining China and India's oil role in South Sudan, said that if operations at the oil fields were stopped, "the situation in Iraq will entrench an idea in China that it needs to move away from very risky oil investments abroad".

"They've started to do that over the last five to seven years, but the situation in Iraq -- coupled with South Sudan -- really solidifies the need for them to diversify in the future," he added.

Victor Shum, the Singapore-based vice president of industry consultancy IHS Energy Insight, said that in the medium- to long-term, the instability in Iraq will lead to higher oil pricing.

"That's not going to be good for China, because China is a major crude oil importer -- the world's largest," he said. "So, China's going to have to spend more foreign exchange to buy crude."

All PetroChina's Iraqi fields are in the centre or south of the country, but the company representative told the Global Times: "Some Chinese nationals in the north were evacuated. We have prepared some contingency plans."

The newspaper also reported that more than 1,000 Chinese employees of state-run firm China Machinery Engineering Corp were "stranded" in the northern Iraqi city of Samarra, although a company staff member disputed the description.

In recent days, some Western embassies have begun withdrawing staff from Baghdad, and on Tuesday Turkey said that it had evacuated its consulate in the southern Iraqi city of Basra.

Beijing's foreign ministry has issued security warnings and guidance to firms operating in Iraq, and Hua said: "There are more than 10,000 Chinese employees in Iraq. Most are in relatively safe areas."

A CNPC employee was kidnapped last week from an oil field project in southern Iraq, but has since been released, she said previously.

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