Articles

IOCs demand Erbil, Baghdad meet conditions before resumption of oil exports

Chenar Chalak

Mar. 06, 2025 • 3 min read
Image of IOCs demand Erbil, Baghdad meet conditions before resumption of oil exports Workers walk in the Nihran Bin Omar field north near Basra, Iraq on January 12, 2017. Photo: AP

“Fair and transparent agreements are necessary that include payment surety, transparent implementation of Iraq’s budget law stipulations, and resolution of payments that are in arrears,” read a statement from APIKUR

 

MILAN, Italy - International oil producers in the Kurdistan Region on Thursday said they are ready to “immediately” resume oil exports through the Iraq-Turkey pipeline, as soon as the governments in Erbil and Baghdad meet their previously-communicated demands.

 

Representatives from the Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (APIKUR) on Thursday attended a meeting in Baghdad with officials from the Iraqi federal government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), aimed at restarting Kurdish oil exports following a two-year halt.

 

The oil producers said that they conveyed their conditions to the officials during the meeting, stressing that “additional meetings are required to finalize agreements.”

 

“Fair and transparent agreements are necessary that include payment surety, transparent implementation of Iraq’s budget law stipulations, and resolution of payments that are in arrears,” read a statement from APIKUR - an association of eight companies that together make up around 60 percent of the total amount of Kurdish oil production.

 

The companies said they need formal agreements which ensures that the producers will be “fully paid” for the oil, and also demanded agreements that ensure they are paid for “oil delivered but not paid for between October 2022 and March 2023.”

 

The Iraqi Parliament passed an amendment to the Federal Budget Law in early February, which obliges Baghdad to reimburse Erbil for the production and transportation cost of one barrel of oil at the average cost of production and transportation of the federal oil ministry.

 

The cost was previously valued at $6, which the IOCs repeatedly criticized as being way lower than their actual expenses.  According to the amendments, the IOCs would now be paid $16 to in the first phase, before an independent technical consultant team is assigned to assess the extraction cost.

 

APIKUR said that the terms of their existing contracts and the economic models within them must be respected, adding that the work scope of the consultant “should be agreed by all parties,” noting that they have already recommended consultants to KRG officials.

 

The IOCs reiterated that they are ready to finalize the agreements needed to resume oil exports, noting that their objective is to promote the Kurdistan Region “as an attractive destination for international oil and gas companies, service providers and investors.”

 

“We anticipate more meetings,” APIKUR spokesperson Myles B. Caggins III told The New Region, noting that the meeting schedule is set by the Iraqi government.

 

Exports of the Kurdistan Region’s oil through the Turkish Ceyhan pipeline, where part of Kirkuk’s oil was also exported, were halted in March 2023 after Ankara lost a case against Baghdad in a Paris-based arbitration court. The case accused Ankara of breaching a 1973 agreement by allowing the KRG to start selling oil independent of Baghdad.

 

After the nearly two-year halt, Baghdad and Erbil eventually announced late February that they reached an agreement to resume the Region’s oil exports to the international market through Turkey’s Ceyhan port.

 

The halt in exports has dealt a major blow to Iraq and the Kurdistan Region's economy, with over $27 billion in lost revenue to date.

 

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Author Chenar Chalak

Chenar Chalak is an Erbil-based journalist covering news of Iraq and the wider region. His special interests include working on social issues and stories on marginalized groups.

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