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Kurdistan oil exports are halted by a dispute over arrears

The deal to restart Iraqi Kurdistan's oil exports was stalled Tuesday after two oil-producing firms demanded assurances that their debts will be paid.

The agreement between the federal government of Iraq, Kurdish region governments and oil companies is intended to allow for the resumed export of approximately 230,000 barrels of oil per day from Kurdistan via Turkey to the global market. Since March 2023, they have been suspended.

The Iraqi cabinet was to approve the deal on Tuesday involving oil companies active in Iraqi Kurdistan. It wasn't immediately clear if this deal would go through without DNO or Genel.

DNO Norway, the largest producer of the semi-autonomous area, and Genel Energy have not signed the agreement because they want assurances about the repayment of arrears.

DNO claimed it had "easy fixes" that could be agreed quickly, without revealing what they were.

Kurdistan owes around $1 billion to its producers, with DNO accounting for about $300 million. Yousef SABA, Barbara Lewis and Barbara Lewis edited the report.

(source: Reuters)