CORRECTED-UPDATE 2-Eight oil companies reach agreement with Iraq, KRG to resume oil exports

Reuters09-24
CORRECTED-UPDATE 2-Eight oil companies reach agreement with Iraq, KRG to resume oil exports

Corrects Sept. 24 story throughout to show that the statement was from eight oil companies operating in Kurdistan, not APIKUR umbrella group

Agreement would let 230,000 barrels of crude a day flow

Exports from Iraqi Kurdistan expected to restart in days

Norway's DNO and partner Genel Energy yet to sign

Companies are seeking arrears for past deliveries

Sept 24 (Reuters) - Eight oil companies operating in Iraqi Kurdistan, representing over 90% of production, reached agreements in principle with Iraq's federal and Kurdish regional government $(KRG)$ to resume oil exports, the group said on Wednesday.

The agreement would mark a breakthrough in the deadlock and allow around 230,000 barrels of crude a day to flow through the Iraq-Turkey pipeline which has been suspended since March 2023.

"This framework, once signed and implemented, should allow exports to restart in the coming days, while providing a path toward longer-term arrangements," the group said in an emailed statement.

The group includes six members of the Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (APIKUR), representing eight international oil companies in total, and two members outside APIKUR - local KAR Group and Forza Petroleum, sources told Reuters.

Two APIKUR members - Norway's DNO DNO.OL and UK's Genel Energy GENL.L - have not signed the agreement yet, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The agreed framework maintained "the sanctity of existing contracts" and provided surety of payment to the international oil companies, the group said.

DNO did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Genel Energy said it had no further comment.

On Tuesday, the two companies welcomed plans to restart the exports, but said some tweaks were still needed to the proposed terms, specifically to address KRG's arrears for past deliveries.

Kurdistan has accumulated around $1 billion in arrears to producers. DNO's estimated share of overdue receivables is about $300 million.

The group said the KRG and IOCs also agreed to meet within 30 days of resuming exports to work towards creating a mechanism for settling the outstanding debts.

The Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline shut after the International Chamber of Commerce ordered Turkey to pay Iraq $1.5 billion in damages for unauthorised exports by the KRG. Turkey is appealing but says it is ready to restart the pipeline.

Reuters reported last week that Iraq, OPEC's second-largest producer, had given preliminary approval to a plan to restart exports from Kurdistan.

(Reporting by Maha Eldahan, Additional reporting by Nerijus Adomaitis, Writing by Ahmed Elimam; Editing by Kirsten Donovan and Philippa Fletcher)

((Ahmed.Elimam@thomsonreuters.com;))

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