The
long-running dispute over oil exports between the Kurdistan Regional
Government and Iraqi federal leadership in Baghdad rattles on, with
Turkey becoming increasingly vocal.
Iraqi officials have yet to cement a
national oil law that would standardize regulations covering exports
and revenue distribution from oil shipped via pipeline from Iraqi
Kurdistan to Turkey, where it could be sold onward to international
markets.
A minor breakthrough recently occurred
which got limited volumes of oil flowing again from Kurdistan to
Turkey, but now Turkish leadership is saying supplies are unreliable due
to persistent militant attacks on the Iraqi section of the export
pipeline that terminates in Ceyhan.
“The pipeline on the Iraqi side is in unusable shape. This is a loss for Iraq,” Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz was quoted as saying by Reuters… “We would be in a position to send this oil to the world markets once the tanks are full. We can’t keep this in tanks,” Yildiz said. – Upstream
The
pipeline has a total capacity of 1.5 million barrels per day – but
volumes have been well below that threshold – and the oil terminal at
Ceyhan reportedly has 2.5 mmbbls reserved for Iraqi Kurdish crude.
http://theenergycollective.com/jared-anderson/371196/energy-quote-day-we-would-be-position-send-oil-world-markets
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