There are links to parts 2 and 3 at the top. Very interesting interview, the exerpt below is just a teaser. One thing I thought was odd, he claims to be a big Bush supporter. I don't see how anybody who is so deeply aware of the peak oil issue could support the disaster that is BushCo.
SPK: Let me make clear the assumption underlying my next question: if the insurgency in Iraq ends how much oil do you think Iraq can bring online in spare capacity? That it's not already producing now, obviously they have some serious problems because the guerillas are blowing up pipelines left and right, etc, so what I am saying is: if the insurgency ends, what kind of oil can we expect from Iraq?
MRS: The most serious problems that the Iraq oil system has is the two old giant oil fields, Kirkuk and Rumelia, were basically around 80-85% of their sustainable oil production in the 80s and 90s and both of those fields have been terribly abused, over the last two years and they finally were able to, about six to nine weeks ago, to let two contracts to have the first serious reservoir studies done of those fields since the late 1970s. And my sense is that what the reservoir field studies will show, if they are done properly is that they basically destroyed those two fields.
And now the question shifts to, well, what about all these structures they have discovered that have basically never been developed? Well Saudi Arabia has 80 of those structures, but for some reason or another in the $50 billion plan of all these old fields they are trying to rebuild, not a single one of the 80 is being tackled.
So, I suspect that in Iraq they must be a little bit like Saudi Arabia's structures. You know, they are pushing these things so hard they had the money, and it really isn't that expensive to actually bring on a new field that you've already discovered.
Then there's the question about exploration in the Western Desert. They clearly haven't, but they've explored extensively in Syria and Jordan and in the Arabian Peninsula and they have never found anything.
If we were evaluating an IPO of an exploration project in the Western Desert Of Iraq I'd say, "until you found something you couldn't raise any money for it."
http://agonist.org/story/2005/6/3/124329/2939