BP's recent deal to redevelop oil and gas fields in the Kirkuk region of Iraq will come to be seen as one of the most important transactions the company has done for two decades, chief executive Murray Auchincloss told investors.
Kirkuk's "huge resource base, low lifting cost, low development cost" represented "a tremendous opportunity for us to use our big field management skills", Auchincloss said today during the launch of BP's new strategy. Both sides of the deal are "very incentivised" to grow Kirkuk production, he added.
"I feel this is a magnificently aligned structure and I think in 10 years' time we'll look back on this as one of the most important transactions BP has done in 20 years," he said.
The deal, which was finalised yesterday, will see the redevelopment of Kirkuk's Baba and Avanah domes, along with the Bai Hassan, Jambur and Khabbaz fields, which currently account for almost all of Iraqi stated-owned North Oil's crude output of around 300,000 b/d.
BP executive vice-president for gas and low-carbon energy William Lin confirmed that the first phase of the redevelopment will give BP access to 3bn bl of oil equivalent (boe) and that the agreement will give "a better return" than BP currently gets from its existing arrangement at Iraq's giant Rumaila oil field.
A complex existing arrangement at Rumaila sees Iraqi firm Basrah Gas take the gas and BP manage the oil, but the Kirkuk deal means "we have gas rights" as well as a right to the oil, Lin said.
As part of its new strategy, BP announced today that it has raised its end-decade goal for overall oil and gas production to 2.3mn-2.5mn boe/d, after previously pledging to reduce its output to 2mn boe/d by 2030.

