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Iraqi oil production has collapsed due to conflict in the Strait of Hormuz, say sources

Three industry sources reported on Sunday that the Iraqi oil production from its main southern oilfields had fallen by 70%, to just 1.3m barrels per day. This is because the country cannot export oil through the Strait of Hormuz as a result of the Iran War.

Before the war, the production from the fields was around?4.3 millions bpd.

The crude storage capacity has been reached and any remaining production after the major cut is used to feed the refineries in the country, according to an official of the state-run Basra Oil Company.

Strait of Hormuz is a narrow and strategically vital waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman. It is one of the 'world's key oil transit chokepoints. About a fifth of all global oil and LNG flows pass through it.

Source: The OPEC member’s exports fell to an average of 800,000 barrels a day on Sunday. Only two tankers loaded because vessels could not freely move through the strait into Iraq’s southern?terminals.

Two oil officials who have a direct knowledge of the terminal operations said that, as no new tankers are able to reach Iraq’s southern terminals by 8 pm local time (1700 GMT), exports will cease completely.

Iraqi oil exports from southern oilfields were 3.334 millions barrels per day, according to a document published by the oil ministry.

The drop in Iraqi oil production and exports is likely to put strain on the country's fragile finances. Since the state depends on crude sales for more than 90% of its revenue and nearly all public spending, it will be a major blow.

A senior Iraqi official in the oil ministry said, "This is?the most serious operational threat Iraq's faced in over 20 years." Reporting by Ahmed Rasheed from Baghdad, and Aref Mohamed in Basra. Editing by Louise Heavens and Alexandra Hudson.

(source: Reuters)