Khaleej Times

Iraq’s south oil exports fall from record

- Khalid Al Ansary

erbil — Iraq’s southern crude oil exports dropped in January from a record high a month before as the country implements output cuts agreed by the Opec and other major producers to curb the global glut.

The nation’s exports decreased 187,000 barrels a day to 3.323 million barrels a day in January from the previous month, according to a person familiar with the matter, who didn’t want to be identified because the data isn’t public. The Oil Ministry’s spokesman couldn’t immediatel­y be reached.

Shipments in January from South Oil Co were 3.278 million barrels a day and exports from North Oil Co 45,000 barrels a day, the person said. Iraq’s exports from the south had risen to a record average of 3.51 million barrels a day in December, Oil Minister Jabbar Al Luaibi said on January 9.

The Opec and 11 other major-producing countries including Russia agreed to cut a combined 1.8 million barrels a day of output for six month starting from January, with Iraq’s share set at 210,000 barrels. Some analysts expressed doubts that Iraq would deliver its share of the cuts, potentiall­y underminin­g the drive to rebalance the market and drain inventorie­s bloated by two years of unfettered production that helped to crash prices.

During the months of negotiatio­n that led to November’s Opec agreement, Iraq had insisted repeatedly that it should be exempted from cuts as it battles insurgency and rehabilita­tes its oil industry after years of war and sanctions. The country also disputed the data to be used in any discussion­s, insisting that numbers compiled by the Opec underestim­ated Iraqi production by about five per cent. Iraq ultimately relented, agreeing to reduce its output. — Bloomberg

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