Halliburton
winds up Iran work
AFP
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com
04 10 07
US
oil services giant Halliburton said Monday it had wrapped up its
work commitments in Iran and was no longer conducting any
projects in the Islamic republic.
Halliburton announced in January of 2005 that it was shutting-down its Iran operations,
but would honor existing "contractual commitments" until they were
fulfilled. Its activities in Iran were managed by non-US staffers.
" Halliburton announced today that all of its contractual commitments in
Iran have been completed and the company is no longer working in Iran," the
firm said in a brief statement.
The company, headed by Dick Cheney from 1995 to 2000 before he became vice president,
added that its "prior business" in Iran was "clearly permissible
under applicable laws and regulations."
Halliburton was involved in at least one contract to drill for gas in Iran in
2005 although the contract was subsequently cancelled by Iran's government.
It had won the contract even though a US law, dating to 1996, threatens sanctions
on US and foreign groups that invest over 40 million dollars in Iran's energy
sector.
Halliburton carried out between 30 and 40 million dollars worth of oilfield service
work in Iran, according to the firm, which has said its operations in the country
were "miniscule."
The company might be pulling out of Iran, which has troubled political relations
with the United States, but it is boosting its footprint elsewhere in the region.
Halliburton said last month that it was relocating to the United Arab Emirates
to capitalize on the Gulf region's booming energy market.
AFP 09 2120 GMT 04 07
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