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Iraqi parliament approves compensation plan for Kurdistan oil dispute, lawmakers

Iraqi parliament approves compensation plan for Kurdistan oil dispute, lawmakers
Iraqi parliament approves compensation plan for Kurdistan oil dispute, lawmakers

The Iraqi parliament approved on Sunday a budget amendement to subsidise the production costs of international oil companies that operate in Kurdistan, a semi-autonomous region. This was done in an effort to unblock northern oil exports. The rate is set at $16 per barrel. This is up from a previous proposal of $7.9 per barrel for transport and manufacturing costs that was rejected by the Kurdistan Regional Government.

The approval by the parliament is a major step towards resolving an almost two-year dispute about Kurdish oil and improving relations between Baghdad, Erbil and Baghdad.

Resuming exports will also ease the economic pressure in Kurdistan, where the stoppage has resulted in delayed salaries for public sector employees and cutbacks to essential services.

The approval of the Parliament is crucial to resolving the oil dispute between Baghdad, Erbil, and Kurdistan. It will also help to expedite the return of Kurdistan's oil exports in order to boost revenues for the country", said Kurdish legislator Rebwar Orhaman.

Iraq's Oil Ministry, in coordination with KRG's Ministry of Natural Resources will appoint a consultant international within 60 days for assessing fair production and transport costs, according to lawmakers and officials from the oil ministry.

In the event of a failure to reach an agreement, the Iraqi Cabinet will choose a consultant without consulting with Kurdish authorities.

Iraq's Cabinet presented the budget amendment in November 2024. The KRG was also asked to comply with the budget amendment.

Transfer its oil

Output to the State Oil Marketing Organization, a state-run organization.

Oil flowing through the KRG pipeline was

Turkey halts the flow

In March 2023, the International Chamber of Commerce will order Ankara pay Baghdad $1.5 billion in damages for the unauthorised exports of the KRG from 2014 to 2018.

The KRG's and Iraqi federal government have conflicting demands, which has slowed down the negotiations to restart exports.

(source: Reuters)