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Turkey seeks new agreement with Iraq on suspended oil pipeline

A senior Turkish official said on Monday that Turkey is willing to negotiate with Iraq a new deal to restart operations of an oil pipeline that was halted between the two nations during a dispute about unauthorised Iraqi imports.

The Turkish Official Gazette published a decision on Monday that the deal, which dates back to the 1970s and is called the Turkey-Iraq Crude Oil Pipeline Agreement, as well as all protocols or memorandums after it will be terminated by July 27, 2026.

Iraq and Turkey are working together to restart oil flow from the pipeline that runs to Turkey's Ceyhan Port following Turkey's decision to stop them in March 2023, after the International Chamber of Commerce had ordered Ankara pay Baghdad damages of $1.5 billion for unauthorised exports in the period between 2014 and 2018.

The Turkish government has appealed the decision.

Ankara said that it was ready to resume its operations. However, talks to this end hit a snag over contracts and payments in March.

Officials said that the pipeline could become "a highly active and strategic pipeline in the region".

The person said that Turkey has invested heavily in maintaining the road and noted its importance to regional projects such as the Development Road, a planned route of trade between Turkey and Iraq.

The official did not give details about what Ankara wanted in the new agreement.

Iraq has not yet commented on this decision. Reporting by Huseyin Haiatsever and Mehmet dinar. Tuvan Gumrukcu wrote the article. Daring Butler and Mark Potter (Editing)

(source: Reuters)