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Sources say that Kazakhstan increased daily Tengiz oil production to 183,000 bpd in February as it recovered after the outage.

Two sources with knowledge of operational data reported that oil production at Kazakhstan's Tengiz giant field has continued to recover over the last few days following a mid-January power outage.

Tengiz, the oil refinery that accounts for almost 40% of Kazakhstan's production, was closed on January 18 due to a fire. This cut down on the nation's overall oil supply, at a time where exports had already been constrained because of disruptions along its main pipeline route.

Sources said that oil production at Tengiz increased to 23,000 metric tonnes (183,000 barrels), up from 14,900 tons (118,900?barrels), on Saturday. The sources expect production to increase and reach 54,000 metric tons (430,000 barrels) by mid-week.

Tengiz’s production in January fell by three times from December to 234,000 barrels per day, according data from the Situational Analytical Center of the Fuel and energy Complex (SAC FEC). According to calculations, the?field produced 691,700 barrels per day in December.

Data from the SAC FEC show that output at Tengiz reached a record of 3.7 million tonnes in August 2025.

Tengizchevroil, the Chevron-led company, has said that it will gradually increase production in line with conditions but refuses to comment on any specific commercial or operational details.

MAINTENANCE CURBS EXPOUT

A source citing data from the?SAC FEC said that Kazakhstan's total production of oil and condensate fell to 1,27 million?bpd during January. This is down from 1.86million bpd and 1.87million bpd respectively in December.

The ministry of energy did not respond immediately to a comment request.

In January, two?other major oil fields also experienced declines. Kashagan's oil production was down by 33%, to 260,000 barrels per day. Karachaganak's oil output fell 13%, to 198.300 barrels per day.

One of the sources claimed that Kashagan's decline is due to maintenance. NCOC, Kashagan's operator, didn't respond to a comment request.

The decrease in Kazakhstan's total output in January is attributed to the restrictions placed on the Caspian Pipeline Consortium export route, after the infrastructure was damaged by a drone strike. It also has something to do with the Tengiz outage.

(source: Reuters)