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Thorvik International Consulting AS provides services for European energy and environment industries, in recruitment, strategy and government affairs work.
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Thorvik International Consulting AS provides services for European energy and environment industries, in recruitment, strategy and government affairs work.
The UK government has denied claims it attempted to influence the shaping of Iraq's oil law, which critics say will hand over control of the country's oil supply to foreign multinationals.
An al-Jazeera TV documentary, to be broadcast on its English language service, claims government officials have been reviewing the draft oil law, commenting on it and trying to influence it.
But speaking on the programme, Foreign Office Minister Dr Kim Howells describes criticism of British government involvement in shaping Iraq's oil law, as "paranoia gone completely loopy".
The draft oil law aims to share revenues equitably among the country's ethnic groups.
Supporters maintain that foreign oil companies have the billions needed to upgrade the country's decrepit wells pipelines and port.
The bill - allocating oil revenues between Iraq's 18 provinces based on their population levels - has been approved by the Iraqi Cabinet and is expected to be approved by the Iraqi parliament by May, a Press Association report said.
A PA report quoted Howells as telling the programme, called Iraq: Mixing Oil and Blood, that "it's a shameful lie" to suggest the British government is not interested in the welfare of the Iraqi people.
He says critics are only interested in "grandising their own conspiracy theories". And he strongly defends the Foreign Office's role in arranging meetings between Iraqi ministry officials and western oil companies, and in influencing the oil law.
In the programme, oil campaigner Greg Muttitt claims he has uncovered new evidence under the Freedom of Information Act that "British diplomats and officials in Whitehall have been reviewing drafts of the law, commenting on it and trying to influence it".
Some believe the oil law could exacerbate the chaos engulfing the country and lead to its complete disintegration if the law is approved in its current form.