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This Article is From Sep 02, 2013

ONGC, Essar Oil shortlisted to bid for Iraq's Nassiriya field

Iraq had in March shortlisted seven firms including Reliance Industries to bid for the project. Others shortlisted at that time included French energy giant Total, Russia's Lukoil, CNPC of China and American firm Brown Energy.

New Delhi:

State-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) and Essar Oil have been shortlisted to bid for development of Iraq's $4.4 billion Nassiriya oil field and the construction of a new 300,000 barrels per day refinery.

The two firms were among five companies that Iraq added to previously shortlisted 7 global energy giants for the development of the Nassiriya oil field and the construction of a dedicated export refinery as one package.

Besides ONGC and Essar, the new bidders added are Russia's Rosneft, Maurel & Prom of France, and South Korea's GS Engineering & Construction, according to Iraq's Oil Ministry.

Iraq had in March shortlisted seven firms including Reliance Industries to bid for the project. Others shortlisted at that time included French energy giant Total, Russia's Lukoil, CNPC of China and American firm Brown Energy.

Russia's Zarubezhneft and JGC & Tonen General of Japan were the other two shortlisted in March from 14 companies that expressed interest in taking up the multi-billion dollar project.

All the 12 qualified firms will now be invited to review data packages and discuss contract terms. Iraq intends to award the project by year end.

The OPEC nation has three main refineries - Baiji, Daura and Basra -- with a total capacity of around 567,000 barrels per day (bpd). It wants to increase the refining capacity to 750,000 bpd through improvements in existing plants.

It also plans four new refineries in Karbala, Kirkuk, Missan and in Nassiriya.

"The Al-Nasiriya Integrated Project contemplates the development of the 4-plus billion barrel Nasiriya oil field in Thi-Qar province together with the construction and operation of a new 300,000 bpd refinery," Iraq's Petroleum Contracts & Licensing Directorate (PCLD), part of the Ministry of Oil,
said.

The international engineering and construction firm Foster Wheeler recently completed a Front End Engineering and Design (FEED) study for the refinery.

The Nasiriya project marks re-entry of RIL into Iraq.

The company's Dubai-based arm Reliance Exploration and Production DMCC had in 2007 taken a 100 per cent stake in the Rovi and Sarta blocks in Kurdistan.

Baghdad termed the award of exploration contract to RIL and other firms by the autonomous Kurdistan region as illegal and threatened to blacklist any firm that dealt with the Kurds.

A year after the blacklisting threat, RIL did not apply for being shortlisted for development of oil fields in Iraq.

Thereafter, it did not figure in the list of companies applying to bid for successive licensing rounds of Iraq.

RIL finally got rid of the Kurd blocks in July last year when it sold its stake to Chevron Corp for an undisclosed sum.

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