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Gold/Mining/Energy : Lundin Oil (LOILY, LOILB Sweden) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tomas who wrote (2559)6/21/2001 8:09:02 PM
From: Tomas  Respond to of 2742
 
Talisman's Bid for Lundin Oil Avoids Sudan Controversy
By Simeon Kerr

LONDON, June 21 (Dow Jones) - Canada's Talisman Energy Inc.'s (T.TLM) bid for Sweden's Lundin Oil AB (LOILY) carefully ringfences the company from further controversy over investment in war-ravaged Sudan, analysts said Wednesday.

Under the terms of Talisman's bid, which Lundin's management has recommended to shareholders, the Swedish company would spin off its Sudanese and Russian assets into a new company called Lundin Petroleum AB, to be run by Lundin's current management. Its Libyan assets, meanwhile, are will be snapped up by PetroCanada.

The offer is worth SEK3.9 billion in total and represents a 22.3% premium over the average 30-day closing price of Lundin Oil shares in Stockholm.

"Talisman has been very careful to ringfence its Sudanese operations in order to stay on the right side of U.S. legislation," said Lunde Salami, a U.K.-based analyst with Wood Mackenzie, an oil consultancy.

"Considering the controversy that has engulfed Lundin recently, I'm not surprised Talisman has given the Sudanese assets a wide berth," he added.

Lundin Oil is exploring for oil in Blocks 5A and 5B of the prolific Muglad Basin, which straddles the North-South border region of Sudan. Lundin-funded roads and airfields near the company's exploration blocks have been used by the military to bomb civilian targets, pressure groups say.

Companies investing in Sudan are currently weighing up the impact of the Sudan Peace Act, recently approved by the U.S. House of Representatives. It aims to ban companies trading securities in the U.S. market unless they publicly disclose their activities in Sudan, including their links to the Sudanese government and allegations of human rights abuses.

Last week, Talisman officials said its listing on U.S. stock exchanges is far more important than any particular asset. They indicated that if its U.S. position was threatened, the company would consider selling its 25% stake in the Greater Nile Petroleum Operating Company, the mainstay of the Sudanese oil industry, which exports around 200,000 barrels of oil a day through the Heglig-Port Sudan pipeline.

However, it is far from clear, what - if any - impact the Sudan Peace Act will have. The act remains subject to Senate and Presidential approval.

"Certainly, the proponents of the bill want to see companies like Talisman banned from raising finance in the U.S.," said Peter Verney, editor of Sudan Update, a specialist newsletter.

But much will depend on a pitched battle between two wings of the Bush camp. "The conservative Christian lobby is hawkish on oil investment in Sudan, while the oil lobby is more relaxed - and they both hold sway with Bush," Verney said.

Salami is doubtful that Talisman would be banned from raising financing in the U.S. "We're likely to see these companies forced to disclose their activities, allowing individual investors to make their own decisions about whether or not to invest," Salami said.

"The U.S. government seems happy with the disclosure option, and is more likely to engage the Sudanese government in order to push for peace, rather than going out to punish firms," he added.

But if Talisman's U.S. position were to come under threat, Salami said, it would certainly sell off its Sudanese holdings.

"It wouldn't be too much of a problem - the Chinese National Petroleum Corp. (Q.CPC) or Malaysia's Petronas (P.PDG) would be keen to snap up the assets," said Salami.

CNPC has a 40% share in GNPOC, while Petronas has a 30% share in GNPOC and a 28% share in Lundin's Sudanese assets.

Until then, Talisman will remain one of the biggest targets of U.S. pressure groups.

Over the past few years, these groups have lambasted Talisman, saying that oil production exacerbates the human-rights disaster that stems from the long-running conflict between the Muslim Arab north against the African, animist and Christian south.

The campaign against Talisman by activists has had some success as oil in Sudan has become a burning issue for the North American media.



To: Tomas who wrote (2559)6/23/2001 8:57:39 PM
From: Tomas  Respond to of 2742
 
Euro firms eye Iranian investments
TBILISI - Reuters, June 22

BP Chief Executive John Browne says he sees no reason why the oil supermajor could not invest in Iran despite the potential threat of US sanctions.
He said BP was in negotiations for several projects in Iran, without giving details. "These discussions are not completed. If they were successfully completed quite naturally we would start work in Iran," Browne said in the Georgian capital Tbilisi. "This we can do. We believe there is a clear precedent for non-American companies to work in Iran."

Under the 1996 Iran-Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA), the United States threatens sanctions against any company investing more than $20 million in the oil or gas sectors of Libya or Iran. But the Clinton administration made no move against any company flouting the law, which was ignored by several European oil companies, including France's Total.

Another European oil giant, Eni, could sign a new deal with Iran worth up to $1 billion to develop its Darkhovin oilfield. Eni is already involved in other upstream oil and gas projects in Iran, OPEC's second biggest producer, which in 1998 offered more than 40 projects worth over $8.0 billion.

ILSA, untested under the Bush presidency, is up for renewal in August.



To: Tomas who wrote (2559)6/24/2001 9:57:45 PM
From: Tomas  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2742
 
Iran: time to open up - United Press International, 20 June
By MARTIN HUTCHINSON, UPI Business & Economics Editor

WASHINGTON, June 20 (UPI) -- Iran's President Mohammed Khatami, by Iranian
standards a reformer, was recently re-elected with 77 percent of the vote.
Meanwhile, the U.S. House of Representatives is actively working, apparently
with the support of the administration, on extending by another five years
the Iran/Libya Sanctions Act of 1996, which imposed strict economic
sanctions against the Islamic state.

Both politically (where my analytical qualifications are limited) and
economically it would appear time for re-evaluation.

Politically, Iran took 52 hostages in 1979 and returned them more or less
unharmed in 1981, after having made a mockery of former U.S. President Jimmy
Carter and American military power. This doubtlessly was galling, but it's
more than 20 years ago. A subsequent president almost fell from power due to
his inability to connect with "moderates" in Iran. Well, in case Congress
hasn't noticed, a government more "moderate" than any Reagan tried to
connect with has been in power for four years and has just been re-elected.

The United States still classifies Iran as a "sponsor of terrorism."
However, Washington has been known to do business with terrorist-linked
countries and governments: Colombia and Syria come to mind. The lines are
not clear-cut here. It must be remembered that, as of today, more Americans
have been killed in one act of domestic terrorism (Oklahoma City, 1995) than
in all acts of international terrorism since the Lockerbie bomb of 1988 --
which itself followed an unprovoked (and indeed, accidental) shooting down
of an Iranian civilian jetliner by the U.S. Navy.

Economically (thank goodness we've got off the politics) Iran is
potentially a very interesting emerging market. With 65.6 million people, it
has a Gross Domestic Product, at market exchange rates, of $61.6 billion
(according to the U.S. Department of Energy's helpful "Energy Information
Administration" guide, May 2001.)

GDP at purchasing power parity is estimated at around $300 billion. This
latter information is of no immediate commercial value, except to 65.6
million Iranians, who have the equivalent of nearly $5,000, rather than
$1,000 per capita to spend in their domestic economy. However, like
equivalent figures for East European countries in transition, it indicates
what size of economy might emerge in the relatively short term if
free-market policies were implemented.

Iran is, of course, also a major oil exporter, currently producing around
4 million barrels per day, and its proven reserves, after a big 1999 find,
now total 90 billion barrels, 9 percent of the world's total. The Iranians
believe that production can be ramped up further, even above 1974s level of
6 million barrels per day, if markets permit. Certainly the new oil find
adds credibility to this hypothesis. Interestingly, Iran also has the
world's second largest natural gas reserves, after Russia, at 812 trillion
cubic feet.

The Iranian economy has been performing quite well recently, with growth
around 4-5 percent for both 2000 and 2001 and a healthy trade surplus. It
needs to do well; population growth averaged 3.2 percent in the 1980s, an
extraordinary high level that is inevitably producing workforce unrest, as
the huge youth cohort hits the job market. Inflation is moderate, at around
17 percent currently.

Economic policy is obscurantist, but not hopeless, and has improved
considerably over the last decade. There is an active Tehran Stock Exchange,
founded in 1968, which is always a good sign, with 295 companies listed at
the end of 1999, and daily turnover of $4-5 million, remarkably substantial
for a market in which there is very little Western participation. Foreign
companies are not constitutionally exempt from expropriation, but have not
in practice been expropriated in the last decade.

In short, Iran has a political opportunity to pursue freer economic
policies, and thereby launch its 65.8 million people into the world's middle
class of emerging market countries. With Khatami re-elected by such a
majority, there seems at least to some extent to be the will politically to
do this. It thus makes every sense for the United States to encourage this
process, in spite of a terrorist threat from Iran that today is more latent
than real (and may become even less real with an economic opening of Iran.)

Of course, relaxation should be gradual, and quid pro quos should where
possible be extracted, but this is not Iraq or North Korea; the possibility
today genuinely exists of opening up Iran, and making a significant portion
of the world, with more than 1 percent of its population, a better, happier

vny.com
_______________________________________________________________

Iran slams sanction renewal vote
United Press International, 22 June
By MODHER AMIN

TEHRAN, Iran, June 22 (UPI) -- Iran Friday strongly condemned the approval
earlier in the week by the International Relations Committee of the U.S.
Congress of a five-year extension of sanctions against Iran.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi said the use of sanctions "as
a tool in foreign policy" has proved to be a failure. "It contradicts
international conventions," Asefi said, according to the news agency IRNA.

The House committee Wednesday ignored the administration's position and
voted for a law designed to punish foreign companies that invest in Iran's
energy sector, and Libya's as well for five additional years.

"The extension of sanctions will deprive the American (oil) companies of
competing with other countries," Asefi said, noting, "In a world which is
moving toward cooperation and solidarity, the United States will once again
be left isolated."

In an open letter released on Wednesday, a number of former and present
members of the Iranian parliament addressed the U.S congressmen calling on
them to "abandon their obstinacy and take a realistic attitude towards Iran
instead of perpetuating anti-Iran sanctions."

The Iran Libya Sanctions Act expires in August after five years, but the
White House had been trying to keep the renewal to only two years, arguing
that a five-year extension would unnecessarily hinder the administration
from altering U.S. policy toward Iran should Washington deem such changes
warranted.

Iran and the United States severed ties in 1980, several months after
radical Islamic students stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehran and took over 50
staffers hostage for 444 days.

Iran has made talks with the United States conditional on an end to the
sanctions and the unfreezing of some $10 billion dollars worth of Iranian
assets in U.S. banks.

vny.com
________________________________________________________________

Iranian Legislators Seek Civilization Dialogue with US
Renmin Ribao, June 21

Iranian legislators have voiced hope that the U.S. could be a party in the process of dialogue among civilizations and take steps to improve relations between the two foes through relaxing sanctions against Iran.

In an open letter to the U.S. congressmen in regard to the possible extension of economic sanctions against Iran, the assembly of former and present representatives of the Majlis (parliament) called for deepened cultural exchanges with the U.S. in a bid to lubricate the rusty U.S.-Iran ties.

About 100 out of 290 legislators in the current Majlis are members of the assembly.

The letter, carried by the official IRNA news agency on Wednesday, said that expansion of ties between the nations and the elite of the two countries in the year of dialogue among civilizations is expected to lead to more understanding between the two sides.

It further pointed out that the U.S. congressmen are expected to refrain from taking any measures that would result in creating pessimism among the public opinion.

Instead of persisting on the unpleasant approaches of the past, the U.S. must resort to new methods, the letter noted.

Diplomatic relations between Iran and the U.S. were severed in 1980 after some Muslim students seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran and held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days, following the 1979 Iran's Islamic Revolution.

In 1996, a U.S. legislation stipulated that measures would be taken against U.S. firms that make substantial investments in the petrochemical industries of Iran and Libya, two nations that the U. S. accuses of backing international terrorism.

As the punitive Iran-Libya Sanctions Act, also known as ILSA, is due to expire in August, a powerful pro-Israel lobby is pressing for another full five-year extension of the controversial legislation. But officials in the U.S. President George W. Bush's administration are in favor of a two-year extension.

Iran has recently said the U.S. should waive sanctions to re-open U.S.-Iran ties, reiterating that the lifting of the sanctions is a precondition for thawing the icy ties between the two countries.

James Schlesinger, former U.S. energy secretary and defense secretary under Jimmy Carter, and Lee H. Hamilton, former chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee have also pointed out that the current stalemate in U.S.-Iranian relations does not serve overall American interests.

The sanctions have cost American companies' opportunities to invest in Iran and develop its vast oil and gas resources, they said, in an article published by the International Herald Tribune on Monday.

The United States "should loose its economic sanctions against Iran and take other steps to foster an improved relationship, without weakening efforts to advance Middle East peace and prevent terrorism and the proliferation of nuclear weapons," they said.

Regarding the letter, Mohsen Nariman, member of the assembly said "our main motive is to put the dialogue of civilizations into practice and thereby tell the U.S. that the optimal way for talks between the two governments is to open up the doors of dialogue."

Yadollah Eslami, member of the central council of the assembly, said the U.S. Congress is under the influence of the pro-Israel lobby, adding "we want to ease the pressures on the congress through such measures."

He expressed hope that the U.S. congressmen will pay close attention to the U.S. interests and refrain from fanning the flames of the hostility.

english.peopledaily.com.cn