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War on Iraq

Iraq to Privatize Electricity

By Ben Lando, UPI. Posted September 10, 2007.


An Iraqi electricity law hasn't been made public.
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Two of Iraq's many needs right now are more electricity and more investment. A law being drafted could satisfy both, paving the way for foreign and domestic private companies to build power plants, a step toward fully privatizing the electricity sector.

"It should be short coming," a senior U.S. official working in Baghdad on Iraq's electricity sector told United Press International on condition of anonymity on the sidelines of an Iraq energy conference.

A top legal adviser is working on it with the Electricity Ministry, the source said, adding it "could be" before Parliament before the year's end.

Others UPI spoke to refused to go on the record but confirmed the law was being worked on in a parliamentary committee as well, with the help of another U.S. official in Baghdad.

"Yes, we have plans for privatization," Iraq Electricity Minister Karim Waheed Hasan told UPI. "We have two projects which should be under execution very soon. We are planning to announce many stations, many power plants."

Earlier this year Iraq's Parliament approved an oil refinery investment law that gave special terms to the private sector to build refineries. Iraqis suffer from a fuel crisis largely associated with a lack of refining capacity.

The oil refinery law is the first step in a long walk toward fully privatizing the downstream oil sector, Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani told UPI after the law was passed. Many in Iraq's government, to some extent, are keen on splitting open the long-nationalized upstream sector as well.

The electricity law hasn't been made public, and details are unclear. Hasan said he hopes two power plants will be completed by next year and "in the future, yes," the entire sector will be privatized.

"I think there is nothing to stop having it privatized but still it needs more legal framework in order to get the satisfaction and assurances for the investor to go in this sector," said Ali al-Dabbagh, an Iraqi government spokesman.

Iraqis suffered through the summer heat with little power -- and what they got was inconsistent -- to power fans and air conditioners. (Backup generators were hostage to the fuel shortage.) Electricity generation reaches about 40 percent to 50 percent of demand, Hasan said during a presentation at the Iraq Oil, Gas, Petrochemical and Electricity Summit, organized by the London-based Iraq Development Program, though the sector has more capacity than demand.

Baghdad and Irbil provinces receive less than eight hours of power a day, while only Diyala and Dohuk provinces receive more than 16 hours, according to the presentation. Throughout the summer, however, regular reports from Iraq told of days on end without electricity.

Insurgents target the electricity sector, especially the towers and lines running between cities. From April 2003 through the third week of August 2007, at least 318 electricity sector workers were attacked, according to an expert in threats and vulnerability to the energy sector worldwide who spoke on the condition of anonymity. There were also at least 166 attacks on power lines and towers, stations and generators and substations. The expert cautioned that the numbers were likely very low, considering the number of incidents that aren't reported.


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Corporate welfare, the solution for all problems
Posted by: ScottP on Sep 10, 2007 2:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And so we go down the same path for every problem. Lack of health care, give money to insurance CEOs. Lack of security, give money to the war profiteers. Lack of electricity, give money to GE and Bechtel.

Perhaps if we really wanted electricity, rather than bonuses for executives and bribes for corrupt politicians, we would demand that the Iraqi electrical workers who had been running the system before they were fired after the invasion be re-hired. They had managed to scrape together a system from old parts and raw materials through the whole sanctions period. They provided more electricity than the country gets now in spite of a parts embargo and continued bombing by the US, after 90% of the system was destroyed in the Gulf War. But rather than pay the best people for the job their small salaries to get the system going again, we'll leave them unemployed, and pay several times as much for some cronies to fail at the job. Apparently an important part of foreign policy is to make others dependent on US corporations.

Call it privatization if you'd like, I call it a scam.

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