Iraq restarts small Kirkuk oil exports after a year of suspension

The flows resumed on Friday at a modest level of around 50,000-60,000 barrels per day in Kirkuk. (AFP)
  • The flows resumed on Friday at a modest level of around 50,000-60,000 barrels per day

LONDON: Iraq has restarted exports of Kirkuk oil, interrupted more than a year ago amid a standoff between the central government in Baghdad and Kurdistan’s semi-autonomous region, industry sources said on Friday.
The development is a win for the US government which has been putting pressure on both sides to settle the dispute and resume flows to help address a shortage of Iranian crude in the region after Washington imposed new sanctions on Tehran.
The flows resumed on Friday at a modest level of around 50,000-60,000 barrels per day versus peak levels of 300,000 observed during some months of 2017 and it was not clear when and by how much they will rise, sources said.