It's all noise. The company is obviously sold TBA. |
Thank you, makes perfect sense |
Jack - "Has anyone confirmed they can go alone on the pipeline? Who actually owns the pipe?"
For 9 years the KRG and Turkey exported Kurdish crude and there was nothing Baghdad could do about it.
The Paris arbitration court ruled in March 2023 that Turkey had only breached the ITP agreement by loading ships without Baghdad's approval.
And from September that will no longer apply because the ITP agreement expires.
The pipeline was never the issue, the loading of ships was the issue. |
After the approval of the three-year federal budget law, there were several articles related to the commitment of the Kurdistan Regional Government, but did not comply and only handed over about 399 billion of non-oil revenue, which was more than four trillion Delivery of 90,000 barrels of oil for six months, which was later suspended. The parliamentarians say that despite the non-compliance of the Kurdistan Regional Government, the federal government has tried to solve the problems, including by allocating three loans last year worth more than two trillion dinars, which they call illegal. The Shiite lawmakers said they would suspend their participation in parliamentary sessions until the Federal Supreme Court decides on the approval of the three bills, which include a general amnesty, personal status amendments and the return of land to their owners. The number of Shiite MPs is about 20. |
A number of Iraqi Shiite lawmakers have called for no money to be spent on the Kurdistan Region without the delivery of oil. They say they will question Taif Samihttps://x.com/rudawkurdish/status/1883078697554751551?s=46 |
The buyers will be building a great deal of transport infrastructure |
Has anyone confirmed they can go alone on the pipeline?Who actually owns the pipe? |
The $25 Billion Cost of Iraq’s Oil Deadlock
By Julianne Geiger - Jan 23, 2025, 12:00 PM CST The delayed approval of a $16-per-barrel production fee has prolonged the shutdown of Kurdistan’s oil pipeline to Turkey’s Ceyhan port, costing $25 billion over 22 months. The impasse hinders Iraq’s ability to meet OPEC+ obligations while maximizing revenue, putting Baghdad in a political and economic bind. Despite Turkey’s claim that the pipeline is operational, political negotiations and power struggles continue to delay resumption of oil exports. Pipeline In a twist that is perhaps surprising even for the labyrinth of Iraqi politics, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has found itself blindsided by a delayed parliamentary vote on oil production costs. Despite earlier agreements, the Iraqi parliament opted to hit the brakes on approving the $16-per-barrel production and transport fee proposed in November, throwing yet another wrench into a pipeline that’s been as dormant as the region’s export ambitions for almost two years.
KRG Prime Minister Masrour Barzani, fresh from rubbing elbows at Davos, lamented the unexpected development, saying, “I was very surprised.” One assumes his surprise was mildly tempered by the region’s long history of political chess moves masquerading as negotiations.
This delay is the latest in a costly deadlock over the key oil pipeline linking Kurdistan to Turkey’s Ceyhan port, capable of moving 500,000 barrels per day.
That’s no small amount of change.
OPEC+ May Be Facing Long-Term Production Cuts
At today’s Brent crude price of roughly $75, the shut-in barrels equate to $37.5 million in forgone revenue daily. For context, over the 22-month shutdown (approximately 660 days), that’s a jaw-dropping $25 billion loss.
With stakes as high as these, haggling over $16 per barrel seems less like fiscal prudence and more like a power struggle.
For the federal government in Baghdad, this prolonged impasse presents an additional conundrum: reconciling obligations under OPEC+ with its inability to maximize output. Restarting the pipeline would undoubtedly bolster national revenues. But it might also breach production caps under OPEC, landing Iraq between a rock and a hard place.
Turkey insists the pipeline is operational, citing earthquake repairs completed long ago, but the blame game continues. The question isn’t just when this gridlock will end, but how much revenue both governments can afford to lose before the region’s most lucrative resource flows freely again.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com |
Iraq revives oil production from 20 wells in Kirkuk: Source Economy Kirkuk Nineveh Oil Production NOC Iraq revives oil production from 20 wells in Kirkuk: Source 2025-01-24 09:17
Font Shafaq News/ Iraq's Jambur oil field in Kirkuk has resumed production from 20 wells, while an Angolan company signed a contract to drill 13 wells in the Qayyarah oil field of Nineveh Province, a source from the North Oil Company (NOC) reported on Friday. The source told Shafaq News, “The NOC has launched field development projects to enhance production in its Kirkuk fields. Technical and engineering teams successfully restored 20 wells in the Jambur field that had been inactive for years, adding around 10,000 barrels per day (bpd) to output.” “Currently, production ranges from 300,000 to 350,000 bpd, down from 500,000 to 750,000 bpd about 13 years ago.” Notably, the Jambur oil field is located northeast of Kirkuk, parallel to the Kirkuk and Bai Hassan fields, and has been in production since August 1959. In a related development, the source noted that “Sonangol, the Angolan operator of the Najmah and Qayyarah fields in Nineveh, has signed a contract with Iraq Drilling Company (IDC) to drill 10 development wells, along with three optional appraisal wells in the Qayyarah field.” The Arab Well Logging and Well Services Company (AWLCO) also participated in the turnkey contract. All parties are committed to completing the project within the set timeline, which is expected to increase Qayyarah's production to 15,000 bpd. In December 2009, Iraq’s Ministry of Oil signed two preliminary agreements with Sonangol to develop the Qayyarah and Najmah fields. The company secured the contracts by proposing fees of $6 per barrel with a production target of 110,000 bpd for Najmah, and $5 per barrel with a target of 120,000 bpd for Qayyarah. |
H7, Agree.Baghdad don't deserve large foreign investment and the world is looking in and thinking NO THANKS.September will come and going forward I think Kurdistan need to separate themselves from the cretins down south altogether imo. |
To hell with it and these clowns. September isnt that far away.
GLA |
The best delivery of that line ever 😆
“Everybody have fun tonight” |
I said Bigdog5Dance hall days, love |
Everybody have fun tonight Everybody have fun tonight Everybody Wang Chung tonight Everybody have fun tonight Everybody Wang Chung tonight Everybody have fun |
I'll tell you what I want, what I really, really wantSo tell me what you want, what you really, really wantI wanna, (ha) I wanna, (ha) I wanna, (ha) I wanna, (ha)I wanna really, really, really wanna zigazig ah |
Sarah on overtime today. I am surprised as Friday night is usually busy for taxis. |
He may not see it as a spanner of course and may have a cunning plan probably drempt up after watching Traitors. |