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http://news1.equities.com/2012/08/19/394422.html

Business: Agenda: Flare-ups in the energy market

Rupert NeateGuardian

MAKING THE NEWS

Hayward plunges into a new oil conflagration

After the critical mauling former BP boss Tony Hayward received for his handling of Gulf of Mexico blowout, you would think he'd want a quiet life. But instead, his new job as boss of Genel Energy has put him at the centre of a skirmish between the oil barons of Iraq and Kurdistan.

Genel, whose backers include Nat Rothschild, has taken a bet on Kurdistan being the next big province for the oil industry and recently increased its stake in an exploratory field there. So the City will want to know Hayward's take on the argy-bargy between Baghdad and Erbil at the company's half-year results on Thursday. Iraq has threatened to cut ties with foreign oil companies if they violate Iraqi law and proceed with upstream work in the self-governing region. Kurdistan, meanwhile, is close to completing a pipeline to Turkey that will enable its producers to bypass Iraq altogether.

Mehmet Sepil, Genel's president, is already feeling chipper: "Baghdad has lost its oil and natural gas fight against northern Iraq. Baghdad says it will put those who operate in northern Iraq on a blacklist but the largest companies in the world are working there. The energy fight is over today. The important question is when Baghdad will admit this." My guess is not any time soon.

Paralympics provides next hurdle for BAA

BAA, the owner of Heathrow airport, had a quietly successful Olympics - which counts as a major achievement for one of the UK's more pilloried businesses. Given that success for BAA consists of not being caned by the national press on a daily basis, a glitch-free Games is cause for celebration. But it faces a more complicated repeat of that test on Wednesday when it is expecting its busiest arrival day for Paralympians, with more than 1,000 athletes expected to arrive while the airport handles about 190,000 passengers at the same time.

It will be an interesting introduction for BAA's newest prospective shareholder, Qatar Holding, which has agreed to acquire a 20% stake in the business. Spain's Ferrovial, which once owned 55% of BAA, will soon find its stake dipping below 40%. If the next few weeks go smoothly, as they hopefully should, then perhaps BAA can begin to think it has banished the operational glitches that have bedevilled its recent history, not least the terrible handling of the 2010 snow crisis. If errors abound, however, the ensuing media and political reaction might make the Qataris wonder what they have let themselves in for.

Premier's hopes still in choppy waters

There will be another chance to take the temperature of the (political) waters of the South Atlantic when plucky British explorer Premier Oil reports its first-half figures on Thursday.

Last week rival Desire Petroleum did its best to drum up excitement over the chances of a commercial oil strike off the Malvinas, as Buenos Aires likes to calls them. The buzz bodes well for Premier, which recently bought a 60% stake in Aim-listed Rockhopper Exploration's interests in the Falkland Islands to get its hands on some of the action in the Sea Lion field, which could have between 400m and 500m barrels of recoverable reserves.

But the oil companies are battling in choppy seas, as the Argentinian government is threatening to take anyone "illegally" drilling off the disputed islands to court. The British government has promised to stand by its explorers, and many industry experts point out that the Argentinian court threats are highly unlikely to stand up under international law.

But some equity analysts have since questioned the wisdom of Premier choosing to put so many of its eggs into such a fragile basket. The chief executive, Simon Lockett, will need to explain why the Sea Lion should be allowed to roar.

ROMAN'S LIGHT TOUCH

Chelsea kick off this year's Premier League campaign today with yet more Russian cash. Gazprom, the state-owned energy giant that bought Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich (pictured) out of Sibneft in 2005, has given the club a wheelbarrow of money in exchange for being named Chelsea's official energy supplier.

So if the lights go out at Stamford Bridge, you know who to blame. More seriously, the deal has attracted the ire of environmental campaigners, who point out that Chelsea's players are being kept illuminated by a company that plans to start drilling for oil in the Arctic.

Gazprom has installed a drilling platform in the Prirazlomnaya field 60km offshore in the Pechora Sea, from which it is hoping to extract hundreds of millions of barrels of oil. Greenpeace warns the drilling could lead to an environmental catastrophe, and that Gazprom's oil spill response plan is out of date. According to Greenpeace, Gazprom only has enough equipment to deal with a 500-tonne oil spill: more than 5m tonnes spilt from BP's Deepwater Horizon well.

Captions:

Tony Hayward: in a conflict zone again.






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