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Baghdad will announce the resumption in oil exports via Turkey within hours

Baghdad is expected to announce the resume of oil exports through the Iraq-Turkey Pipeline in the next few hours, according to a statement from the Iraqi Oil Ministry.

Iraq will export 185,000 barges per day via the state oil marketer SOMO. This quantity will increase gradually, according to a ministry statement.

The Turkish government halted oil flows through the Ceyhan Pipeline in March 2023, after the International Chamber of Commerce ordered Ankara pay Baghdad damages of $1.5 billion for illegal exports from 2014 to 2018.

Kurdistan regional government announced on Sunday that the Iraqi Kurdistan government had reached an agreement with the federal oil minister to resume Kurdish crude imports, based on the available volumes. This was after the dispute between the Baghdad government and the Kurdistan region government was resolved.

Sources have confirmed that the Trump administration has put pressure on Iraqi officials to allow Kurdish exports of oil to resume or else face sanctions along with Iran. Later, an Iraqi official denied the pressure and threat of sanctions.

Also reported on Thursday, the Iraqi Government had filed new papers with a Baghdad court to declare all Kurdish oil production-sharing contracts illegal. This move casts doubts on the source of the crude exported.

Two sources who have direct knowledge of this matter confirmed that there are currently no agreements in place for the return of oil exports with the international oil companies operating in the region. (Reporting and editing by David Evans, Alex Richardson and Jana Choukeir)

(source: Reuters)