NEWS
April 9, 2008

Iraq and the EITI: An Encouraging Step for Development

As Iraq struggles to move beyond the deadlocked debate over oil legislation, a positive sign came last week when the nation formally expressed its interest in the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative.

This is an encouraging step, as our colleague Yahia Said pointed out during his testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. With its February 21 letter to the EITI secretariat, Iraq's government officially declared its commitment to greater transparency in the management its vast oil revenues. Iraq holds the planet's second largest reserve of oil, now estimated at 300 billion barrels.

Iraq's EITI process in its very early stages - even without the challenges of the current political and security climate, it will need substantial support and technical assistance from the EITI, as well as the World Bank and groups like Revenue Watch to fulfill this aspiration.

The upside of EITI success will be manifold. Iraq is in the midst of negotiating power-sharing and revenue-sharing arrangements between the central government, regional leaders and political factions that are increasingly hostile and mistrustful. Progress on transparency in the oil sector could help foster trust among opposing parties and communities, and usher in the possibility of compromise on other issues.

Iraq is also determined to expand investment in its oil industry, and an established mechanism to ensure transparent revenues will create an attractive environment for investors, in particular the more serious companies who are themselves interested in transparency and accountability in the development of oil.

To begin in earnest, Iraq must now appoint a senior official within the government to manage the EITI process. Working with local civil society groups and the business community, Iraqi officials will then need to craft a plan for the collection, publication and verification of revenue data from the nation's enormous and still-fractured oil sector.

Though the road to success is unlikely to be smooth, Iraq's leaders deserve both congratulations and support from every side for this move toward a more open and stable development climate.

Read more Revenue Watch analysis and commentary on oil, transparency and reconstruction in Iraq ...

MEDIA FEED

U.S. Said to Allow Drilling Without Needed Permits - The New York Times

Australia Gas Deal Renews Tension - Financial Times

Charged With Fraud, Nigeria's Ruling Party Leader Resigns - Reuters

Western Senators Propose Ban on Pacific Drilling - The New York Times

To Limit Corruption around Mining in Africa, Follow the Money - The Globe and Mail

Court Backs Oil Project - The New York Times

Transparency Increases, But There Is Still a Long Way to Go - The Phnom Penh Post

IMF Develops Project to Help Africa Deal with Illicit Trade - African Manager

Three-day Conference on Africa's Natural Resources Starts in Tanzania - Standard Times Press

After Oil Rig Blast, BP Refused to Share Underwater Spill Footage - ABC News

Finger-Pointing, but Few Answers at Hearings on Drilling - The New York Times

Complaints Over U.N. Prize Sponsored by Equatorial Guinea's Obiang - Reuters

Guide: Community-Company Grievance Resolution for Australian Mining Industry - Oxfam Australia (pdf)

Cote D'Ivoire: President for Life, and Then Some - The New York Times

In Midst of Massive Spill, Oil Industry Fighting Transparency and Accountability - Oxfam America

Leaked Oil Contracts in DRC Threaten Resource Wars and $10 Billion Rip-Off by British Company - Carbon Web

 

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2006, 2005

PUBLICATIONS

Contracts Confidential: Ending Secret Deals in the Extractive Industries
Contract transparency is sorely needed to improve the management of natural resource wealth. In a new report from RWI, authors Peter Rosenblum and Susan Maples delve into government and private sector objections to contract disclosure and make conclusions about what information may legitimately and reasonably be kept confidential, and how civil society institutions can better confront the challenge of secret deals.
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NEW TRANSLATION: Revenue Redistribution at the Local Level
Many resource-rich countries are attempting to compensate their producing regions through shares of resource revenues to be spent at the local level. In "Extractive Industries Revenues Distribution at the Sub-National Level," development economics consultant Matteo Morgandi presents a comparative analysis of international legislation for distribution of extractive revenues from across all levels of government. Prepared at the request of the Peruvian National Congress, the report studies the legislative practices of seven resource-rich countries to identify potential and address challenges. Please note that this report is now also available in Vietnamese.
Learn more ...