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View Full Version : From CNN....Halliburton (Dick Cheney-former CEO) Wins Iraq Rebuilding Contract!


QualityIsJobOne
03-25-03, 06:12 PM
Iraq rebuilding contracts awarded

Halliburton, Stevedoring Services of America get government contracts for early relief work.
March 25, 2003: 4:33 PM EST
By Mark Gongloff, CNN/Money Staff Writer

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - The first contracts for rebuilding post-war Iraq have been awarded, and Vice President Dick Cheney's old employer, Halliburton Co., is one of the early winners.

The Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR) unit of Halliburton (HAL: up $0.54 to $20.66, Research, Estimates), of which Cheney was CEO from 1995 to 2000, said late Monday that it was awarded a contract by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to put out oil fires and make emergency repairs to Iraq's oil infrastructure.

President Bush Tuesday asked Congress for $489.3 million to cover the cost of repairing damage to Iraq's oil facilities, much or all of which could go to Halliburton or its subcontractors under the terms of its contract with the Army.


Cheney divested himself of all interest in Halliburton, the largest U.S. oilfield services company, after the 2000 election.

Halliburton wouldn't speculate about the total monetary value or duration of its contract, under which it will put into action some of the firefighting and repair plans it outlined for the Army in a study it conducted in November.

"KBR's ... contract is limited to task orders under the contract for only those services which are necessary to support the mission in the near term," Halliburton spokeswoman Wendy Hall said.

The Army Corps of Engineers told CNN Tuesday that Halliburton would be paid on a "cost plus" basis, meaning it would be reimbursed for the costs of its work and would get a certain percentage of those costs as a fee.

Since it's still unknown how much damage has been or will be done to Iraqi oil fields in the war, it's difficult to estimate the contract's eventual dollar value.

But its biggest value could be that it puts Halliburton in a prime position to handle the complete refurbishment of Iraq's long-neglected oil infrastructure, which will be a plum job.

Getting Iraq's oil fields to pre-1991 production levels will take at least 18 months and cost about $5 billion initially, with $3 billion more in annual operating expenses, according to a recent study by the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, named for the first President Bush's secretary of state during the first Gulf War.

"Certainly Halliburton would have the lead [in the competition for that job], even absent this contract, given the size and scope of their current operations," said Pierre Conner, an analyst with Hibernia Southcoast Capital. "But there's no question they'll start with some footprint there. It clearly puts them in the position where they will know more about the situation and have a bit of an operation there."

Though none of the potential administrators of such a contract -- including the Defense Department, the State Department's U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the United Nations -- have claimed responsibility for handing out the job, Monday's award and Bush's request for funding seem to indicate the U.S. government will be in charge.

Halliburton said it has subcontracted the firefighting portion of the Army contract to Houston-based companies Boots & Coots International Well Control Inc. (WEL: up $0.06 to $1.16, Research, Estimates) and Wild Well Control Inc., a private company.

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Hall of Halliburton said all oil fires should be put out within 240 days. Very few oil wells have been set ablaze by Iraqis so far, in contrast to the first Gulf War in 1991, when Iraqi troops retreating from Kuwait set fire to more than 700 Kuwaiti oil wells. Halliburton's KBR unit was involved in putting out the 1991 fires.

Separately, USAID late Monday awarded a $4.8 million contract to Stevedoring Services of America (SSA), a private company based in Seattle, to manage the Umm Qasr ports in southern Iraq.

Umm Qasr's ports, where U.S. and British troops have struggled for full control, are seen as critical to efforts to bring humanitarian relief to Iraqis. SSA will handle several tasks, including assessing the need for dredging and repairs to the ports, and unloading and warehousing cargo.

USAID plans to issue seven other contracts, including one for $600 million for general construction work in post-war Iraq. Halliburton is among several companies reported to have put in bids for that contract.

raj2001
03-25-03, 07:02 PM
Added to the firefighting contract..... ka-ching!

RichW
03-25-03, 07:09 PM
"To the victor belongs the spoils of the enemy."

firephoto
03-25-03, 07:11 PM
Didn't someone figure out they could use the exhaust from a jet turbine to snuff out an oil well fire fairly quick?
I thought I saw or read this somewhere.

Roger
03-27-03, 09:58 PM
"Halliburton (Dick Cheney-former CEO) Wins Iraq Rebuilding Contract!"

That's like predicting that tomorrow is Friday.

Karl Foster
03-28-03, 11:36 AM
What other company is capable of doing this?

So what you are saying is that no Pres/Vice Pres should have ever worked in the private sector as there will eventually be a conflict of interest?

pmichael
03-28-03, 01:16 PM
This is blatant cronyism if I ever saw it...
Now if this had occurred while Clinton were in office, there would be loud protests by the right wing loons.

Our government should not be run like this. How this could be so accepted so nonchalantly is beyond me. I don't want to support Halliburton with my tax dollars, and I'm not sure why anyone else would want to either.

Karl Foster
03-28-03, 02:07 PM
What other company bid on the contract? Which other company met the specifications of the contract? Should Halliburton be excluded simply because Cheney at one time worked there?

Are you in the contracting office that awarded the contract? How can you claim cronyism without analyzing the specifications and the bids that were submitted? Were other companies automatically excluded simply because they weren't Halliburton? If so, I'll agree with you, but until that is proven, I don't buy it.

I don't know those answers, but before everyone jumps on Halliburton, perhaps some further analysis is in order.

RandyAB
03-28-03, 04:58 PM
http://money.excite.com/ht/nw/bus/20030328/hle_bus-n28165772.html

Not sure if they won it or not...unless this is article is for another contract

Richard King
03-29-03, 09:47 AM
Now if this had occurred while Clinton were in officeClinton has never had a real job that he could crony for after the fact.

Martyva
03-29-03, 10:44 AM
And besides, he appointed a former Republican congessman as defense secretary and followed Cheney's blue print on military downsizing (although he didn't downsize as much because the economy allowed more to be spent on defense.)

AllieVi
03-30-03, 06:32 AM
Let's see.... The more bombs that are dropped, the more bombs that will have to be purchased to replace them. And the more damage that is done in Iraq, the more rebuilding work there will be for US companies. Sounds like a Bush economic recovery plan...

John Corn
03-31-03, 11:51 AM
Hallinburton is OUT of Iraq rebuild!!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2901793.stm


Ah, Dick will get another deal somehow. He didn't give up being the multi-million dollar a year paid CEO of that company to make less than 200K as VP because of a need to "serve America."

Politicians give up millionaire salaries to take less. Think there's not a payoff?

Mike123abc
03-31-03, 03:38 PM
Originally posted by John Corn
Hallinburton is OUT of Iraq rebuild!!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/2901793.stm


Ah, Dick will get another deal somehow. He didn't give up being the multi-million dollar a year paid CEO of that company to make less than 200K as VP because of a need to "serve America."

Politicians give up millionaire salaries to take less. Think there's not a payoff?

No, maybe there is the concept that you have made enough money in the past and are set for life and do not have to worry about making another buck. Besides Cheney does not even own any more stock so if they were to get a contract he would not get money.

Not everyone is all concerned with making money.