2025-09-30T08:28:17+00:00
Shafaq News – Kirkuk
Kurdistan Region oil exports are
running steadily at 190,000 barrels per day through Turkiye’s Ceyhan port, a
source at the Iraqi-run North Oil Company confirmed on Tuesday.
Speaking with Shafaq News, the
source described coordination between Baghdad and Erbil as central to
maintaining steady exports under agreed schedules, explaining that pumping and
storage operations are proceeding without technical or logistical obstacles,
allowing crude to reach global markets without interruption.
Exports resumed on September 27
after more than two years of suspension, following negotiations between Iraq’s
Oil Ministry, the Kurdish Ministry of Natural Resources, and international
companies. The talks produced a tripartite agreement placing the State Oil
Marketing Organization (SOMO) in charge of managing Kurdistan’s shipments
through Ceyhan.
Read more: Pipe dream or partnership? Iraq’s oil restart tests a fragile federal compact
