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Oil prices remain unchanged as Iraqi outages and tariff concerns clash.

The oil price was little changed Friday, despite the fact that it had risen in the previous session. This is due to fears of a possible decline in demand amid uncertainty over U.S. tariff policies and concerns about drone attacks on northern Iraqi fields.

Brent crude futures fell 4 cents or 0.06% to $69.48 a barrel as of 0239 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude futures were down 3 cents or 0.04% to $67.51 a barrel.

Prices rose $1 on both contracts on Thursday after four days of drone strikes on oil fields in Iraqi Kurdistan, which shut down half the region's production.

The market has also been buoyed by seasonal travel demand. JPMorgan analysts stated that in the first two week of July, the global oil demand averaged 105.2 millions barrels per daily (bpd), an increase of 600,000 bpd compared to a year ago and in line with expectations.

The market is still impacted by the uncertainty surrounding the final U.S. Tariff Policy, which it appears will not be resolved until after August 1. This is in addition to plans from major oil producers that they will remove their production cuts, increasing supply when the summer season in the Northern Hemisphere ends. Brent and WTI have both fallen over 1% this week.

In a recent note, ING analysts stated that "near-term fundamentals of oil remain supportive." The market is expected to remain tight for the remainder of this quarter before improving in the final three months.

Two energy officials reported that the oil output in semi-autonomous Kurdistan has been reduced by 140,000 to 150,000 barrels a day. This is more than half of the region's usual output of 280,000 bpd.

Although no group has claimed responsibility, officials have pointed to Iran-backed groups as likely sources of the attacks on oilfields this week in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Iraq's Federal Government announced on Thursday, despite the attack, that Iraqi Kurdistan would resume oil exports via a pipeline into Turkey after a 2-year halt.

(source: Reuters)