4/17/03
Estimating
The Costs of Iraqs Reconstruction
by
Erik Kruse, SCRC |
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Now
that the war is over, what will it cost to rebuild
the war-torn nation? Analysts have differing estimates
for the cost. While the United Nations Development
Program estimates the cost at $30 billion over
the next three years, others have estimated cost
at over $100 billion (1).
The reality is that final reconstruction costs
will depend on the amount of destruction that
the Iraqi regime incurs. Of course, that variable
is currently unknown, which makes it difficult
for both development agencies and engineering
and construction firms to accurately estimate
the costs of reconstruction. In fact, an anonymous
executive from an engineering and construction
firm recently commented on the U.S.
Agency for International Developments
(USAID) procurement process. The whole procurement
process made us nervous. In some cases, USAID
couldn't answer basic questions (2). Simply
put, the uncertainty surrounding the effects of
war makes it difficult to estimate the costs of
reconstruction.
However, estimators with companies who have been
invited to bid on the emergency projects by USAID
can look to the past to learn about the future.
While it has limited utility, the situation in
war ravaged Kuwait in 1991 lends itself to comparison.
At the end of the 1991 Gulf War, retreating forces
of the Saddam Hussein regime blew up an estimated
732 oil wells in Kuwait. The effects of the oil
fires were predicted to be devastating. Many believed
it would take up to five years to suppress the
fires and restore the production of hydrocarbons
(3). In fact,
some high-profile scientists worried that the
black soot caused by the fires would reach the
stratosphere and stay aloft long enough to circle
the earth and trigger a mini-nuclear winter (4).
Of course, had this actually happened, it would
have raised actual costs of reconstruction well
above even the highest cost estimates of the time.
Fortunately, one factor effectively negated this
scenario: the content of the burning oil was relatively
high in sulfur. The presence of sulfate in the
smoke plumes increased the likelihood that the
pollutants would be naturally precipitated from
the atmosphere. This is exactly what happened
to the plumes of sooty, pitch black smoke that
were created by the inefficient burning of Kuwaiti
oil. Lawrence Radke, a scientist at the National
Center for Atmospheric Research, recently commented
on the effects of the Kuwait oil fires and was
quoted in The Wall Street Journal. Theyd
show a black plume in a corner of the Gulf, shaped
like an exclamation point, but it would disappear
by the time it got to the Indian Ocean,
said Radke. Because of the sulfur, even
these huge fires (produced) aerosols that could
be removed by atmospheric processes: 10 days and
it (was) over (4). Apparently, Mother Nature
helped the world prevent a climatic catastrophe
in 1991.
So did Bechtel
Corporation, which was awarded a large contract
by the Kuwait Oil Company. Both parties knew that
if they could extinguish the fires quickly, then
they could help minimize the fires impact
on the environment. Bechtel, now an SCRC member
company, arrived in Kuwait in March of 1991. The
company mobilized an international workforce and
coordinated a massive effort to put out the wellhead
fires, to stop the gushing flow of oil, and to
help resurrect the Kuwait oil fields. The first
project involved extinguishing more than 650 wellhead
fires and capping 750 damaged or burning oil wells
(3). Surprising many analysts, the project took
only nine months to complete. In fact, the ceremony
in which the emir of Kuwait extinguished the final
oil well fire occurred on Nov. 6, 1991 (4).
A subsequent Bechtel project involved rehabilitating
the oil fields oil gathering and processing
capabilities. During this project, more than 2,000
kilometers of pipe were laid. Workers reconstructed
storage tanks, administration buildings, warehouses,
tank farms and 22 gathering centers. An entire
telecommunications system, consisting of 6,500
telephones and portable radios, was installed
to support the operation, which required an international
force of 16,000 workers and 6,000 pieces of construction
equipment. By December of 1991, the Kuwait Oil
Company was producing 400,000 barrels of oil per
day. Just one year later, its oil production was
restored to the prewar production capacity of
2.1 million barrels per day (3).
References:
(1) Fogarty, T. (3/28/03). Companies bid on
rebuilding Iraq. USA Today.
(2) Rubin,
D. et al. (March, 2003). War
fuels burst of contracting. Engineering News-Record.
(3) Kuwait
Reconstruction. Bechtel.com.
(4) Begley, S. (3/21/03). Burning oil wells
may be less damaging than first thought. The
Wall Street Journal.
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