Your Number One Source
for Buying and Selling Iraqi Dinar

Iraq Dinar Phone Number

Exchange rate

1,193.00 Iraqi Dinars = 1 USD
1 Iraqi Dinar = 0.000838 USD
  Iraqi Dinar Value for 8/7/2008
"Many play the lottery and place their hopes on mere numbers and odds. Some people gamble on sports stars and their chances at winning certain games. What about a gamble that might actually mean something, a gamble that involves not only more than yourself, but an entire people? A bet that just maybe a nation could move past totalitarian dictatorship & religious extremism to hopefully one day truly join the free world as full-fledged independent economy. This is your opportunity for just such a gamble, because who knows, it just might pay off."
 

Resources

FinancialStep.com - Financial Services Web Directory.
<img width="100%" src="images/ibar/a99.jpg"/>
2007: Waiting game over Iraq's oil reserves
October 1, 2007

In Iraq, oil companies face a dilemma. They can wait for the central government in Baghdad to agree a new oil law that will give them a legal framework in which they can operate, and for the security situation to become manageable.
Or they can press ahead and sign agreements with the Kurdistan regional government, the authority in the autonomous north of Iraq, at the risk of souring relations with Baghdad and shutting themselves out of deals in the rest of the country.

It is a decision that has so far divided the smaller operators from the majors. In Iraqi Kurdistan, the companies that are active include DNO - which has produced the first oil from a new source in Iraq since the invasion of 2003 - Addax, Dana Gas, Sterling Energy and Western Oil Sands, which is spinning off its activities in the region as part of its takeover by Marathon.

Most recently, they have been joined by Hunt Oil, a privately held US independent, which this month signed a deal to explore in Kurdistan. The majors, on the other hand, have been conspicuous by their absence, aware that Iraq's central government does not recognize the legality of agreements signed with the KRG.

Approval

Hussain Al Shahristani, Iraq's oil minister, said last week about Hunt Oil's deal: "All these contracts have to be approved by the federal authority before they are legal . . . This was not presented for approval; it has no standing.'' Only three per cent of Iraq's vast reserves of oil and gas are in Kurdistan, and while the minnows of the oil world might be able to make a good business out of three per cent of Iraq's reserves, the big fish want access to the remaining 97 per cent. That is why the majors that are interested in Iraq, including Total and Chevron - which plan to collaborate in the country - and Royal Dutch Shell, are all working with the government in Baghdad.

While they wait for contracts to be offered, the majors are building relationships, training engineers and carrying out technical studies for free, in preparation for the day when they might be able to operate. The question is how long their patience will last. The level of violence is still unacceptably high, and the oil law is stuck in parliament. If anything, the prospect of agreement appears to be receding as tensions between the parties grow.

If the political situation in Iraq continues to deteriorate, there may come a time when the majors decide it is better to have three per cent of a large amount than 97 per cent of nothing.

Source: Financial Times
 
© 2007 DinarBanker.com - 225 Valley Rd. NW - Atlanta, GA 30305 - 888.DINARS1
All Rights Reserved Worldwide :: Atlanta Web Design :: Atlanta Internet Marketing :: Atlanta Web Marketing
Atlanta Web Design and Internet Marketing