Iraq starts work on Basra-Haditha oil pipeline, state news agency says

Iraq starts work on Basra-Haditha oil pipeline, state news agency says
Iraq has ‌commenced work on an oil pipeline linking Basra to Haditha with a planned capacity of 2.5 million barrels per day, the state news agency said on Friday citing the oil ministry, as the OPEC producer seeks to expand export routes. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 01 May 2026 15:18
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Iraq starts work on Basra-Haditha oil pipeline, state news agency says

Iraq starts work on Basra-Haditha oil pipeline, state news agency says
  • The ⁠700-kilometer pipeline will ⁠transport crude for export through multiple routes
  • Crude exports through the Kirkuk–Ceyhan oil ‌pipeline had resumed in March

BAGHDAD: Iraq has ‌commenced work on an oil pipeline linking Basra to Haditha with a planned capacity of 2.5 million barrels per day, the state news agency said on Friday citing the oil ministry, as the OPEC producer seeks to expand export routes.
About $1.5 billion has been allocated for the project, although its pace will ‌depend on securing ‌further budget allocations, the ministry ‌said.
The ⁠700-kilometer (435-mile) pipeline will ⁠transport crude for export through multiple routes, including Syria’s Baniyas, Turkiye’s Ceyhan and Jordan’s Aqaba, while also supplying refineries along its path, a ministry spokesperson said.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Mohammed Shia ⁠al-Sudani chaired a meeting to follow ‌up on ‌the Basra-Haditha pipeline project, approved in 2024, and ‌said it had been conceived as ‌a proactive step anticipating current regional conditions and guarding against potential disruption to existing export routes.
Crude exports through the Kirkuk–Ceyhan oil ‌pipeline had resumed in March, after Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government ⁠agreed ⁠on restarting flows.
Baghdad is also working to revamp a disused pipeline that would allow oil to be pumped directly to Turkiye’s Ceyhan port without passing through the Kurdistan region.
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to the Iran war has curtailed oil exports from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait and Iraq, sending prices higher.