Crude exports from Iraq's semi-autonomous Kurdistan region will resume through the Iraq-Turkey pipeline within hours, Iraq's oil minister said Friday. But an industry body representing foreign operators in the region said there are still outstanding contractual issues that need to be overcome before the long-awaited restart can happen.
Speaking during a visit to the Khor al-Zubair port, Iraq's oil minister Hayan Abdulghani said state-owned oil marketer Somo would "announce in the coming hours the commencement of the region's oil export operations".
Exports through the pipeline, which links oil fields in northern Iraq to the Turkish Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, would begin "at an initial rate of 185,000 b/d", Abdulghani said, adding that flows would increase gradually "to reach the capacity specified in the general federal budget".
Basim Mohammed Khudair, the director general of state-owned oil services firm Iraq Drilling Company, said last weekend that 300,000 b/d would be available for export out of the Kurdistan region in the agreement's preliminary stage, of which 185,000 b/d would be shipped through the Iraq-Turkey pipeline. The remaining 115,000 b/d would be directed to refineries in the region, he said.
Khudair said Iraqi Kurdish crude output would gradually climb to 400,000 b/d, the level agreed on in the federal budget.
The oil minister's comments come just days after Iraq's oil ministry said it was awaiting the green light from the Turkish government to restart flows through the pipeline. The ministry had said it expected to secure the approval within two days.
But the Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (Apikur), an industry body representing eight foreign oil companies operating in the Kurdistan region, poured cold water on the prospect of an imminent restart, suggesting that there are still issues that need resolving between the operators and the federal government in Baghdad.
"Apikur member companies remain prepared to immediately resume exports as soon as formal agreements are reached to provide surety of payment for past and future exports consistent with our existing contractual legal and commercial terms," Apikur said. But "there has not yet been any outreach in this regard to Apikur member companies. Apikur member companies do not have agreements that would lead to resuming oil exports today," it said.
Oil producers in Iraqi Kurdistan have been shut out of international markets since March 2023 after Turkey ordered the closure of the pipeline following an arbitration ruling that said it had breached a bilateral agreement with Iraq by allowing Kurdish crude to be exported without Baghdad's consent.
Disagreements between Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government over commercial terms followed, preventing pipeline flows from resuming. A budget amendment, increasing the compensation for Kurdish production and transportation costs, was passed by the Iraqi parliament earlier this month, ending the dispute and paving the way for exports to restart.