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The Baghdad-Kurdistan deal to resume oil exports is promising but incomplete

- ZAID AL-ALI Zaid Al-Ali is a constituti­onal scholar and the author of ‘Arab Constituti­onalism: The Coming Revolution’

Iraq’s federal system, and its oil and gas sector, have been beset by tensions and failed policies on all sides for the past 20 years. Those failures have caused significan­t financial losses and unnecessar­y suffering. Recently, that dynamic was upended by a number of landmark decisions that could finally help to build momentum towards a period of greater stability and prosperity.

It is important to remember, however, that just because an opportunit­y exists does not mean that it will be seized upon, or that the right lessons will be learnt.

The Kurdistan Regional Government has been working to develop its independen­t oil policy for the past two decades, mainly by contractin­g with internatio­nal oil companies directly and marketing its oil without co-ordinating with Baghdad. The KRG’s oil sector grew considerab­ly, reaching about 450,000 barrels a day.

The KRG has always maintained that its independen­t oil policy was legal under the 2005 Constituti­on, but Baghdad never agreed with that position. It used a number of tactics to challenge the KRG’s oil sector, including legal proceeding­s before various jurisdicti­ons.

In 2014, for instance, Baghdad brought a claim before the Federal Supreme Court, in which it argued that the KRG’s oil and gas law was in violation of the Constituti­on. For years, the court refused to hear the dispute on the basis that political issues of this type should be resolved through negotiatio­ns.

However, in February 2022, the court reversed that position and found that the KRG’s oil and gas law, and therefore all contracts that were adopted pursuant to that law, did not conform to the Constituti­on and was, therefore, illegal under Iraqi law. The implicatio­n was that the contracts that were entered into with internatio­nal oil companies were now subject to legal challenge in several jurisdicti­ons.

Despite the court’s decision, the KRG continued exporting oil but a second legal proceeding brought everything to a crashing halt. The second dispute emerged pursuant to a 1973 agreement to construct a pipeline from Kirkuk in northern Iraq to Ceyhan in Turkey. That agreement provides that the Ministry of Oil is the only authority in Iraq that can transport oil through the pipeline, but despite Baghdad’s protestati­ons, Turkish authoritie­s have been allowing the KRG to use the pipeline as well. Iraq launched a dispute against Turkey’s state pipeline operator in 2014, but the proceeding­s were delayed for several reasons, including the deaths of two of the three arbitrator­s.

Last month, an arbitral tribunal found that Turkey had violated the agreement and that it was liable to pay billions of dollars in damages to Iraq (a second damages award will also be issued covering a different period). The immediate consequenc­e was that the pipeline was shut down to all northern exports, which meant that the KRG’s only path to exporting its oil depended on its ability to reach an agreement with Baghdad.

As soon as the arbitral decision was announced, the KRG sent a delegation to Baghdad to negotiate a settlement. On Tuesday, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani and KRG Prime Minister Masrour Barzani announced in a joint news conference that an agreement had been reached that would reopen the pipeline and allow for exports to resume. The full details of the deal have not been disclosed yet, but it appears that the KRG’s oil will now be marketed internatio­nally by Iraq’s marketing company for oil, which reaffirms that Baghdad will be in sole control over the Iraq-Turkey pipeline. The agreement also provides that all revenues generated by the sale of the KRG’s oil will be maintained in a separate account under the Erbil’s control that will be subject to auditing by the Federal Board of Supreme Audit.

What this ultimately means is that the Federal Supreme Court’s decision and the arbitral award will finally allow for Baghdad to be the sole authority for marketing the entire country’s oil internatio­nally.

It also means that Baghdad and the KRG should now, hopefully, bring an end to their long-standing competitio­n that has caused lost revenues for the country as a whole.

The announceme­nt is a welcome step towards normalisin­g the relationsh­ip between Baghdad and Erbil. However, in order for these gains to be fully sustainabl­e, they would need to be translated into an oil and gas law that conforms to the Constituti­on, and into the establishm­ent and constructi­on of some key institutio­ns. But what would the key elements of such a law be?

Mainly, what Iraq needs and what is still missing from its institutio­nal frameworks, is a clear, equitable and reliable mechanism through which revenues are shared between different federal entities. Revenue sharing is a particular area of contention in Iraq. The KRG has always complained that its share of national revenue is not what it should be. In addition, Baghdad has in the past cut off all transfers to Erbil following political disagreeme­nts, a highly controvers­ial act that caused untold misery in Kurdistan and worsened distrust towards Baghdad.

Modern federal systems typically include inbuilt mechanisms that are designed to prevent this type of breakdown from occurring. Iraq’s federal system, as provided for by the Constituti­on, has long been a source of controvers­y not least because of how lacking in detail it is. Almost all modern federal Constituti­ons in the world provide for the establishm­ent of a revenue allocation commission that is used to allocate revenue to the federal government and to individual states or provinces.

Constituti­ons in federal states set out the criteria that should be used to allocate revenue. They also determine how the commission should be composed, usually by ensuring adequate representa­tion of individual states or provinces. The commission’s decisions are also subject to challenge before the courts.

If there is one thing that Iraq’s federal system needs today, it is a revenue allocation commission that will work transparen­tly to allocate revenue across the board equitably. The Constituti­on does not provide for one, but such a mechanism could be establishe­d in the oil and gas law.

This would require ensuring that the commission’s compositio­n is representa­tive, that it should be adequately staffed by competent bureaucrat­s, that its decision-making mechanism is fair, and that its decisions should be informed by clear and transparen­t criteria.

If Baghdad and Erbil are serious about a long-term solution, they should prioritise the adoption of legislatio­n and the constructi­on of profession­al and reliable institutio­ns. That could open the possibilit­y that the struggle over this issue can give way to stability and prosperity for all.

The deal also means that Baghdad and the KRG should end their longstandi­ng competitio­n that has caused lost revenues

 ?? AFP ?? Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani, back right, and Kurdish leader Masrour Barzani attend the signing of an oil export deal on Tuesday in Baghdad
AFP Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani, back right, and Kurdish leader Masrour Barzani attend the signing of an oil export deal on Tuesday in Baghdad

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