Sunday, January 22, 2012

Near 40% increase in travelers at Erbil Airport



  


       Erbil International airport , located 7.0 Km North-west of ERBIL city, operates 60 flights a week to and from 25 countries worldwide. The airport was expanded in 2010 and it is claimed its runway is the longest in the Middle East and the fifth on the world level, after China, Russia, South Africa and the U.S.


        In a press release Erbil Airport General Director Talar Fayaq said more than 621, 870 people used the airport in 2011. She predicted the airport could see further increases in the number of visitors and the amount of transported goods in 2012. There is an interview here between Talar and the news source Rudaw which describes 2010 increases. Rudaw does a good job of covering happenings in the Kurdistan region.

      “I expect shipments will increase to Kurdistan via the Erbil International Airport as the needs for imported goods is on the rise in Kurdistan.” Talar said. This also reflects the high safety and security standards that we adhere to, as well as our ambitious plans to be on par with the world’s leading airports by offering state-of-the-art facilities,” she added.

      All economic indicators point towards promising opportunities in Iraq’s civil aviation sector, which is experiencing what has been heralded as a ‘new beginning’. Despite being up against a challenging environment and years of underinvestment and deterioration, significant steps towards the reconstruction of the civil aviation sector have been taken. The country has a clear vision of the world-class facilities that it plans to develop, as well as a strong strategy for rebuilding Iraqi Airways as an international airline. Iraq’s major airports are being rehabilitated, and provincial governments are upgrading existing airports as well as planning the construction of new airports.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Turkey Building New Crossings to Iraq

Source: (www.rudaw.net)


ERBIL, Iraqi Kurdistan -- Turkish authorities say their country is planning to open four new border crossings and a railway between Turkey and Iraq.

The projects are part of an agreement between Iraq and Turkey and are expected to boost trade ties between the two countries. Turkey is currently Iraqi Kurdistan’s major trade partner with about US$6 billion in trade in 2010, according to official Turkish sources.

“Once the new projects are operational, we can divert much of Suez Canal’s business to the Kurdistan Region,” said Hasan Kosa Uglu, the head of foreign relations’ unit at Turkey’s ministry of trade.  

Two of the new borders crossings will be located east of the current major crossing known as Ibrahim Khalil at Habur Bridge. The other two will be west of Ibrahim Khalil.

The projects are within the administrative boundaries of Soran and Amedi districts of the Kurdistan Region. Three of them are expected to be used for visitor crossing between both countries and one is for trade and business.

Ogulu said, "We open these four projects to further strengthen business ties between Iraq and Turkey."

A representative from the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) attended the meetings on the border crossings between Iraqi and Turkish officials.

Speaking to Rudaw, Soran Salahaddin, an advisor for the KRG Ministry of Trade, said, “If the KRG does not approve the location of a certain crossing, it won’t be constructed at that location.”

“The opening of the new gates is very important for transferring goods directly to Arab countries and the Gulf region,” Oglu told Rudaw. “It’s very important that Iraq makes proper arrangements on the border with other Arab countries, as it will make Iraq a transit route for goods and that will greatly benefit Iraq’s economy.”

Walid Shaltakh, an official in charge of the Turkey desk at Iraq’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Rudaw that one of the new gates will be used as a railway crossing.

The Iraqi government is also expected to restore an old railway that connects Mosul in the north to Basra, Iraq’s southern port on the Persian Gulf.

As part of the new plan, the Iraqi government will also build a new railway to connect Mosul to Zakho along the Turkish border.

If the Iraqi side of the railway is built, it will connect the country to Turkey's major railway network which links to European rail systems.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

70% Jump in US Companies Considering Iraq

The Iraqi Embassy in Washington DC dealt with nearly 5,000 applications from American companies hoping to do business in Iraq last year, a 70% jump from 2010, according to an article from Chicago Business.

Among the companies mentioned are the Schaumburg, Illinois-based manufacturer Quality Float Works Inc., which mades devices to control liquid flows in machinery.

Another is Navistar International, whose subsidiary Navistar Defense supplied the U.S. military with about 9,000 MRAPs during the occupation. Now it’s aiming to become a commercial truck supplier in Iraq.

Northbrook, Illinois-based NewMedical Technology Inc., which makes a scar-reducing gel, is diving into what company Vice-president Jeff Dziura described as “cumbersome” regulatory paperwork in order to sell in Iraq.

$5.8 Billion Iraqi Debt forgiven

    

     United Arab Emirates Minister of Foreign Affairs Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahayan said on Monday after a meeting with his Iraqi counterpart and others at the World Future Energy Summit 2012 in Abu Dhabi  that the United Arab Emirates will dismiss $5.8 billion in debts owed by Iraq. During the same meeting his brother, General Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, discussed with the Chinese Prime Minister strategic cooperations to restore and safeguard international peace, security and stability. This can be interpreted in a variety of different ways, but there is no disputing that there is a clear alliance being forged between China and Iraq.

     Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed al-Nahayan said on Monday after talks with his Iraqi counterpart. “An agreement will be signed soon to lay out the legal framework for waiving old Iraqi debt of $5.8 billion.”
Iraqi foreign minister Hoshyar Zebari thanked the UAE for cancelling the debts, which he said was “a very heavy burden” on Iraq. “The relations between the two states have not stopped over the past ten years, but today we have started the official framework of co-operation,” Zebari said.

      The debt goes as far back as the 1980s when Iraq borrowed money from Gulf states for assistance with Iraq’s long-running war with Iran. The move follows a similar one in 2008, when the UAE wrote off almost $7 billion worth of Iraqi debt left over from the era of Saddam Hussein. Trade between Iraq and the UAE reached more than $4.5 billion last year, the foreign ministers said. Zebari, meanwhile, called cooperation between Iraq and the Gulf Cooperation Council members in security and military areas “good,” adding that it was Iraq’s destiny to be with its sister countries in the Gulf.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

67 Billion Dinar allocated to Diyala Province




     A large portion of the Diyala province will receive millions in infrastructure improvement over the next few years due to recent decisions by the Kurdistan Regional Government. The money will be used to improve health, electricity, and education among other projects. Soran Ali Hassan, Khanaqin mayor, said that the money will be for provision of services in Khanaqin, Jalula, Mandali and As Sa'diyah in the next three years at a cost of more than 67 billion dinars in the form of stages. All of these cities are positioned in the Diyala province along the Iran/Iraq border, which is where the Naft Khana Oil Fields are located. The Naft Khana Oil Field is the site of the first oil field discovered in Iraq  in 1923.

    






Thursday, January 12, 2012

Erbil is the most desirable city for foreign investment





ERBIL, Jan. 11 (AKnews) – Erbil Governorate is the most desired destination for foreign investment in 2011 with over $1 billion USD (1.1 trillion IQD) channeled into Kurdistan Region in 2011.

Erbil Governorate received the lion’s share, $1.26 billion USD (1.5 trillion IQD). That is about 57% of the $2.18 billion USD (2.5 trillion IQD) foreign money sloshing about the region according to a survey by Kurdistan Region’s Investment Board.

The remaining two governorates of Kurdistan Region, Sulaimaniyah and Duhok, each attracted $563 million USD (657 billion IQD) and $457 million USD (534 billion IQD) in foreign investments respectively.

The majority of the foreign investment has gone to the housing sector, according to the survey.

Kurdistan Region is the hot spot for investment in Iraq since 2003 and is regarded as one of the Middle East's best growth prospects in 2012. According to statistics released by the Investment Board, the region has attracted some $16.2 billion (19 trillion IQD) in foreign investment over the past five years.

Of this again Erbil Governorate has received the lion’s share, attracting 61% - $9.8 billion USD (11.5 trillion IQD) - across the five years.

In the same period Sulaimaniyah and Duhok attracted $2.7 billion (3.2 trillion IQD) and $1.5 billion (1.8 trillion IQD) respectively.

Kurdistan Region’s boom in foreign investment has been accredited to its accommodating Investment Law, passed in 2007. The law provides incentives for foreign investors including the possibility of owning land, up to 10 year tax holidays, easy repatriation of profits and removal of tariffs on exports and imports related to the project.

Figures obtained from the Kurdistan Regional Government’s Ministry of Trade last month showed a 30% increase in the number of foreign companies registering in Kurdistan Region in 2011. Up from 331 companies in 2010 to 433 companies this year.

By Raber Aziz

RY/JS/AKnews

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Completion of the DNO-RAK MENA Merger



 Today the Norwegian oil company DNO International ASA (DNO) acquired United Arab Emirates based RAK petroleums MENA operating subsidiaries. MENA stands for the Middle east and North Afica according to the World Bank definition. DNO International and RAK Petroleum, both of which have operations in Kurdistan, have both anounced the merger today on their respective websites through press releases. A total of 153,422,343 DNO International shares were issued to RAK Petroleum as consideration for the merger. The DNO shares listed on the Olso Stock Exchange under the ticker(DNO), are valued at NOK 8.64 as of this post. The Norwegian Krone has a current exchange rate of NOK 5.9845/1 USD. Which means that the deal in US Dollars is valued at $221,499,273 as of this post.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Kurds to stay clear of Iraq sectarian strife

Reuters 16:47:56 05 Jan. 2012
 By Jon Hemming

Erbil, Iraq (Reuters) - Iraq's Kurds are determined not to get dragged into a sectarian conflict over Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's attempted arrest of the Sunni vice-president, and the Kurds' leader said failure to implement a federal system would lead to disaster.

Nine years after the U.S.-led invasion, much of Iraq is still plagued by Sunni insurgents and Shi'ite militias, but Iraqi Kurdistan has enjoyed relative peace and prosperity after successfully rising up against Saddam Hussein in 1991 and achieving federal autonomy under Iraq's 2005 constitution.

Unless their interests are directly affected, the Kurds have tried to remain largely aloof from the interminable political wrangling that has beset the central government in Baghdad, attempting to act as a mediator to resolve potential conflicts.

But Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi's flight to Kurdistan last month after an attempt to arrest him on accusations of running death squads has thrust the Kurds centre stage in a political drama that could descend into sectarian violence.

"I don't want to be dragged into this," Masoud Barzani, president of the Kurdish region, told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday.

"We are not part of the sectarian struggle that is there. Of course we are part of the political disagreement and political struggle, but not of the sectarian one."

The Kurds have called for a national conference to settle the differences between Maliki and the cross-sectarian Iraqiya bloc which is boycotting parliament and cabinet meetings, accusing Maliki's Shi'ite-led government of concentrating power.

"We are all waiting for the concerned groups to reach an agreement on when and where to meet," Barzani said.

Barzani said he was ready to host the conference, but political sources said Maliki was against meeting in the Kurdish capital Erbil and wanted the issue of Hashemi cleared up first.

"If they decide to have it somewhere else, then it is up to them, but as far as we are concerned, the venue is not a problem," said Barzani, wearing traditional Kurdish costume of khaki baggy trousers, waistcoat and cummerbund.

"I believe many of the concerned groups are not ready to go to Baghdad," he said.

As for the fate of Hashemi, "this something that the judicial system and the courts have to decide," Barzani said. "We will not interfere in whatever proceedings the judicial system decides."

Hashemi says he is willing to be tried inside the Kurdish zone, and insists a fair trial is not possible in Baghdad.

OIL DEAL, FEDERAL SYSTEM

The crisis put the Kurds in a precarious, but potentially powerful position as brokers if any political deal can be reached, and, if not, both Maliki and the Iraqiya bloc would need Kurdish backing in parliament to overcome the other side.

The Kurds may use this as leverage to win concessions on their own strategic interests, such as control of oil resources and territories disputed between Baghdad and Iraqi Kurdistan.

While relatively secure in the mountains of northern Iraq, the Kurds are upset by the Baghdad's failure to resolve the status of Kirkuk, the city at the centre of large oil reserves, which the Kurdish government claims as part of Kurdistan.

A referendum set in Article 140 of the constitution for 2007 has still not been held.

"We as Kurds we have opted for a voluntary union between Arabs and Kurds and for the system of governance in Iraq to be federal. This is a constitutional right therefore for us and for the people of Iraq, we support a federal system in this country," said Barzani who led Kurdish peshmerga forces fighting Saddam from 1979 after the death of his father who fought Baghdad-rule from the 1940s onwards.

"Preventing the implementation of constitutional articles, this will lead the country to face huge problems," he said. "This will bring about disasters."

With political wrangling in Baghdad also holding up a long-awaited law on the future exploitation of oil riches, the Kurdistan government has gone ahead and signed a series of its own oil deals, most notably with Exxon Mobil, much to the annoyance of others in the central government.

Barzani said there was an agreement with Baghdad that each side could continue signing such contracts until the oil law was passed. The Exxon deal also encompasses areas whose control is disputed by Erbil and Baghdad.

"As for places that are called disputed territories by others, for us they are part of the Kurdistan region," said Barzani. "If they have got any disagreement with this then let them come and implement Article 140 as it says in the constitution."

(Editing by Louise Ireland)

Kurdistan negotiations under attack from Iraq Central Government

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/12/28/deal-between-exxon-mobil-and-kurds-fuels-tension-in-northern-iraq/