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Iraqi state news agency reports that work has begun on the Basra-Haditha pipeline.

Iraq began work on a 'oil pipeline connecting Basra and Haditha with a capacity of 2.5m barrels a day, according to the'state news agency, citing the Oil Ministry, in an effort to expand the export routes for the OPEC producer.

The ministry stated that the project has received a budget of $1.5 billion, but its speed will be determined by the amount of additional funding.

A spokesperson for the ministry said that the 700-kilometre pipeline (435-miles) will be used to transport crude oil via multiple routes including Syria's Baniyas and Turkey's Ceyhan, as well as Jordan's Aqaba. It will also supply refineries on its route.

The Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al Sudani chaired on Sunday a meeting for a 'follow-up' of the Basra to Haditha pipeline approved in 2024. He said that it was conceived to anticipate current regional conditions, and to guard against any disruptions to existing export routes.

Baghdad, the Kurdistan Regional Government and Kirkuk Regional Government all agreed to restart crude exports via the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline in March.

Baghdad is also working to reopen a disused oil pipeline, which would allow oil to?be pumped directly to Turkey's Ceyhan Port without having to?pass through the Kurdistan Region.

Oil prices have risen due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz because of the Iran war.

(source: Reuters)