Millennium Post Siliguri

Iraq holds oil, gas licensing round for 29 projects to develop gas reservoirs

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WASHINGTON: Tesla, opens new tab will spend more than $500 million this year to expand its fast-charging network, CEO Elon Musk said on Friday, days after abruptly laying off employees who were running the business, Reuters reported.

“Just to reiterate: Tesla will spend well over $500M expanding our Supercharg­er network to create thousands of NEW chargers this year,” Musk said in a post, opens new tab on his social media platform X.

“That’s just on new sites and expansions, not counting operations costs, which are much higher,” he said.

After the layoffs last week, Musk said Tesla planned to expand the Supercharg­er network but at a slower pace for new locations.

EV makers have been adopting Tesla’s North American Charging Standard, making the company’s supercharg­ers closer to becoming the industry standard at the expense of the rival Combined Charging System.

However, Musk’s decision to gut the electric-vehicle charging team is scrambling plans for rolling out new fastchargi­ng stations and may delay President Joe Biden’s efforts to electrify U.S. highways.

The Biden administra­tion has doled out $5 billion to states over five years to build 500,000 EV chargers as part of the National Electric Vehicle Infrastruc­ture program, and Tesla has been among the biggest winners of those federal funds so far.

BAGHDAD: Iraq is holding an oil and gas licensing round for 29 projects in a bid to develop its huge gas reservoirs to help power the country and lure billions of dollars in investment­s.

The exploratio­n blocks are spread across 12 governorat­es in mostly central and southern Iraq and for the first time include an offshore exploratio­n block in Iraq’s Arab Gulf waters, Reuters reported.

China’s ZPEC, opens new tab won the first oil block put up for auction, the Northern Extension of Eastern Baghdad Field, after submitting the lowest offer, the oil ministry said.

Iraq’s KAR Group won a bid to develop the Dima oil field in eastern Maysan province, the oil ministry said.

Iraq, OPEC’s second-largest producer after Saudi Arabia, last held a licensing round, its fifth, in 2018.

Saturday’s “fifth plus” licensing round includes many projects left over from that round plus a new sixth round with 14 projects, Iraqi Oil Minister Hayan Abdel-Ghani said.

More than 20 companies pre-qualified for Saturday’s round, including European, Chinese, Arab and Iraqi groups but no US oil majors.

Iraq’s oil production capacity has grown from 3 million to around 5 million barrels per day (bpd) in recent years, but the departure of giants such as Exxon Mobil Corp and Royal Dutch Shell Plc from a number of projects due to poor returns means future growth is uncertain.

Developmen­ts have also slowed due to growing investor focus on environmen­tal, social and governance criteria.

Iraq at one time had targeted becoming a rival to top global producer Saudi Arabia with output of 12 million bpd or over a tenth of global demand.

More than 20 companies prequalifi­ed for Saturday’s round, including European, Chinese, Arab and Iraqi groups but no US oil majors

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