UPDATE 2-Japan firms set to win $10bln Iraq oil deal -paper
* Nippon Oil, Inpex and JGC win landmark Iraq oil deal-paper
* Iraq has made decision but not made an announcement
* Output seen 150,000 bpd for two years, up to 600,000 bpd
* Nippon Oil shares up 4 pct; Inpex, JGC up 2 pct (Recasts with more comment, details)
By Chikako Mogi and Osamu Tsukimori
TOKYO, June 26 (Reuters) - A group of Japanese companies led by refiner Nippon Oil Corp (5001.T) is in the final stage of talks to win a $10 billion development contract for Iraq's huge Nassiriya oilfield, a Japanese newspaper reported on Friday, the biggest foreign oil deal since the fall of Saddam.
Nippon Oil together with top oil explorer Inpex Corp (1605.T) and plant engineering firm JGC Corp (1963.T) had been vying with Italy's Eni (ENI.MI) and Spain's Repsol (REP.MC) in the race for the engineering, procurement and construction contract, but industry sources had said Repsol was no longer in the running.
Iraq's Oil Minister Hussain al-Shahristani said on Thursday that the Oil Ministry has selected a company to develop Nassiriya and has sent its choice to the cabinet for approval. He had declined to identify the company. [ID:nLP907443]
By 0218 GMT, shares in Nippon Oil climbed 4.2 percent, Inpex rose 1.9 percent and JGC gained 2.3 percent.
The Yomiuri newspaper, which did not cite sources, said an agreement could be reached as early as next month.
The EPC deal comes just ahead of next week's unrelated tender for service contracts in six already producing oilfields and two undeveloped gas fields, the first open contest since the U.S. invasion for foreign companies to gain direct access to acreage in a country that holds the world's third-largest oil reserves.
Nippon Oil and Inpex said no decision has been made. A JGC spokesman declined comment.
The paper said oil output would be 150,000 barrels per day (bpd) for two years after the drilling begins and is targetted to increase to 600,000 bpd after that, equivalent to about 15 percent of crude imports by the world's No. 3 oil consumer.
Officials have said in the past that it could produce 100,000 bpd within 18 months, while ENI estimated it might eventually pump up to 1 million bpd.
"It is a meaningful move for Japan's longstanding efforts to diversify its sources for oil supplies," Shun Ohashi, an energy analyst at Sumitomo Corporation, said.
"In light of a longer-out view, it may be also not a bad time to secure such a contract, given current market levels." Continued...

