IRAQ: Turkey will seek Baghdad's consent on a deal for Iraqi Kurdish oil say officials after a bilateral meeting aimed at diffusing a row over energy exports
Record ID:
344367
IRAQ: Turkey will seek Baghdad's consent on a deal for Iraqi Kurdish oil say officials after a bilateral meeting aimed at diffusing a row over energy exports
- Title: IRAQ: Turkey will seek Baghdad's consent on a deal for Iraqi Kurdish oil say officials after a bilateral meeting aimed at diffusing a row over energy exports
- Date: 2nd December 2013
- Summary: BAGHDAD, IRAQ (DECEMBER 1, 2013) (REUTERS FOR AGENCY POOL) **CONTAINS FLASH PHOTOGRAPHY** IRAQ'S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER FOR ENERGY HUSSEIN AL-SHAHRISTANI AND TURKEY'S ENERGY MINISTER TANER YILDIZ ENTERING HALL TO GIVE NEWS CONFERENCE IRAQ'S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER FOR ENERGY HUSSEIN AL-SHAHRISTANI AND TURKEY'S ENERGY MINISTER TANER YILDIZ WALKING TO PODIUM TO GIVE NEWS CONFERENCE/ SHAHRISTANI AND YILDIZ AT PODIUM SHAHRISTANI AND YILDIZ GIVING PRESSER AND JOURNALISTS IRAQ'S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER FOR ENERGY HUSSEIN AL-SHAHRISTANI (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) IRAQ'S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER FOR ENERGY HUSSEIN AL-SHAHRISTANI, SAYING: "We agree that any exports must be with the approval of the Iraqi government and we will discuss the mechanisms that will achieve this" IRAQ'S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER FOR ENERGY HUSSEIN AL-SHAHRISTANI AND TURKEY'S ENERGY MINISTER TANER YILDIZ (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) IRAQ'S DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER FOR ENERGY HUSSEIN AL-SHAHRISTANI, SAYING: "Agreement on definite mechanisms which will help protect Iraq's wealth for the Iraqis and which are approved by the Iraqi government will open the door in front of the Turkish companies to further increase their works, activities and their investments in Iraq" SHAHRISTANI YILDIZ AND IRAQI OIL MINISTER ABDUL KAREEM LUAIBI DURING PRESSER / JOURNALISTS (SOUNDBITE) (Turkish) TURKEY'S ENERGY MINISTER TANER YILDIZ , SAYING: "We seek to get Baghdad's approval for the commercial export of oil from Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkey and to start a tripartite cooperation that serves the interest of all parties involved." SHAHRISTANI AND YILDIZ GIVING PRESSER AND JOURNALISTS
- Embargoed: 17th December 2013 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Iraq
- Country: Iraq
- Topics: International Relations,Energy
- Reuters ID: LVA3BRVGGQZK85N3X9UTDSJHDMC9
- Story Text: Oil exports from anywhere in Iraq to Turkey need the central government's approval, Baghdad and Ankara said on Sunday (December 1) after a bilateral meeting aimed at diffusing a row over energy exports from Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region.
Turkey, hungry for energy and dependent on imports for almost all of its needs, wants Iraqi Kurdistan's oil to help diversify its energy supplies and reduce its ballooning 60 billion USD annual energy bill.
But Turkey's courtship of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has infuriated the central government in Baghdad, which says it has sole authority to manage Iraqi energy resources.
"We agree that any exports must be with the approval of the Iraqi government and we will discuss the mechanism," Iraq's deputy prime minister for energy Hussein al-Shahristani told a news conference with Turkey's Energy Minister Taner Yildiz in the Iraqi capital.
"Agreement on definite mechanisms which will help protect Iraq's wealth for the Iraqis and which are approved by the Iraqi government will open the door in front of the Turkish companies to further increase their works, activities and their investments in Iraq," Shahristani added.
Yildiz said Turkey would seek Baghdad's approval for the commercial export of oil from Iraqi Kurdistan.
"We seek to get Baghdad's approval for the commercial export of oil from Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkey and to start a tripartite cooperation that serves the interest of all parties involved."
Turkey and Iraqi Kurdistan signed a multi-billion-dollar energy package last week, sources close to the deal said on Friday (November 29), that will help transform the Iraqi region into an oil and gas powerhouse.
The Turkish foreign ministry has since said the deals had not been finalised and that it would seek Baghdad's cooperation.
Yildiz said the two sides had also discussed an existing plan to extend a pipeline to take crude oil from Iraq's southern Basra oil fields to Turkey.
It was Yildiz's first visit to Iraq since his plane was denied permission to land by Baghdad late last year when he tried to attend an annual energy conference in Arbil, Iraqi Kurdistan, amid the long-running oil dispute.
Yildiz will travel on to Arbil for the same conference, which starts on Monday.
Baghdad says Kurdish efforts towards oil independence could lead to the breakup of the country and the dispute has also raised concern in Washington.
Shahristani said on Thursday any energy deal with Arbil would be "an encroachment on the sovereignty of Iraq".
Autonomous since 1991, Iraqi Kurdistan has often chafed against the central government and even threatened to secede, but still relies on Baghdad for a slice of the OPEC producer's 100-billion-plus USD budget.
It is already trucking its oil to world markets through Turkey and it plans to open a new export pipeline by the end of the year, angering Baghdad further. - Copyright Holder: POOL (CAN SELL)
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