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Iran Conflict 2026
18APR

Iraq ramps Ceyhan pipeline toward 770kbd

3 min read
14:57UTC

Iraq is raising Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline throughput from 220kbd toward a 770kbd target over roughly two and a half months, the first new European-accessible crude route since the conflict began.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ceyhan is the first real new supply lever, and its medium sour grade is what makes it count.

Iraq is ramping the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline from 220kbd (thousand barrels per day) toward a 770kbd target over roughly two and a half months 1. The line carries crude from the Kirkuk fields to Ceyhan, Turkey's Mediterranean export terminal, delivering oil to European refiners without touching The Gulf. The push comes as Iraq's southern output fell 70% to 1.3mbd and its seaborne exports dropped 97% in May, so the northern pipeline is replacing collapsed southern volume.

Oil funds about 90% of Iraqi state revenue, which makes the ramp a fiscal necessity rather than an opportunistic grab for market share. With the south choked, Baghdad has to push crude through the only export artery still open to it.

Kirkuk's medium sour barrels map directly onto the feedstock Mediterranean refiners lost when Russian Urals and Iraqi Basra supply tightened, so the addition matters by grade as much as by volume. That substitution, rather than the headline barrel count, is why a full ramp to 770kbd would rank as the largest European-accessible crude addition of the conflict so far. Where early-May freight priced a Hormuz-wide closure with the VLCC TD3C route near WS458 , Ceyhan reframes the question from how to avoid The Gulf to whether the Mediterranean can be loaded fast enough to refill it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iraq has two main ways to get its oil to buyers. The first is southern ports in the Gulf, which use supertankers, but those tankers cannot easily pass through the Strait of Hormuz blockade right now. The second is a long pipeline running north through Iraq and Turkey to the Mediterranean coast at Ceyhan. Iraq is now trying to push as much oil as possible through that northern pipeline, ramping it from its current 220,000 barrels a day up to a target of 770,000. That oil would reach European refineries much more easily than Gulf oil right now. The problem is that this pipeline has had political disputes for years over who controls the oil fields and who gets paid what, so getting it to full capacity is not straightforward.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iraq's southern seaborne exports collapsing 97% to 1.3mbd reflects the Hormuz closure's direct impact on a country that routes most of its southern production through Basra Oil Terminal and Al-Faw, both of which require VLCC tankers that cannot safely transit a blockaded strait. Unlike Kuwait, which also has southern port dependency, Iraq has the Kirkuk-Ceyhan alternative.

Activating that alternative at scale requires resolving three overlapping constraints simultaneously: the Erbil-Baghdad lifting rights dispute, pipeline integrity maintenance deferred during the years of low utilisation (220kbd for most of 2024-25), and Turkey's transit tariff demands which EPDK has historically leveraged as a fiscal policy instrument.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    A fully ramped Kirkuk-Ceyhan at 770kbd would add roughly one-third of Libya's total export programme to Mediterranean supply, providing a partial offset for the Gulf closure that European refiners have not had since April.

  • Risk

    The KRG-Baghdad fiscal dispute and Turkey's transit leverage mean the ramp could stall or reverse if payment terms collapse, as they did during the 2022-2023 shutdown.

First Reported In

Update #6 · OPEC's quota is fiction at a 37-year low

OilPrice.com· 8 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Iraq ramps Ceyhan pipeline toward 770kbd
Kirkuk's medium sour slate substitutes for the Basra and Urals feedstock Mediterranean refiners lost, so a 550kbd addition could soften Med sour differentials on grade match alone, independent of where the flat price sits.
Different Perspectives
Shipping and war-risk insurers
Shipping and war-risk insurers
War-risk premiums for Hormuz transits reached 3 to 10 per cent of hull value on 17 July, against 0.25 per cent before the war, as Brent cleared $87 and daily transits fell to eight vessels. Underwriters are pricing the confirmed UKMTO mine near the Traffic Separation Scheme, not the IRGC's unconfirmed 18 July mining claim, which CENTCOM called false.
Oman
Oman
Abbas Araghchi led an Iranian delegation to Oman-hosted talks in Muscat on 18 July, an agenda confined to reopening the Strait of Hormuz and nothing else. Oman's decades of studied neutrality make it the one channel neither Washington nor Tehran needs to be seen initiating, and that narrowness is what lets it survive the bombing.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's electricity ministry asked residents to ration water and power after the IRGC set Shuaiba's generating units alight on 17 July, the second Kuwaiti site struck in two days. The country draws 90 per cent of its drinking water from plants sharing power infrastructure, so one strike reaches every tap in the hottest weeks of the year.
Jordan
Jordan
Amman still reports no casualties or damage of its own from the 17 July attack even as CENTCOM confirmed two American dead on the same runway, a line it has not amended since. Hosting the base that produced the war's first US fatalities puts Jordan's decades-old defence arrangement with Washington under a domestic scrutiny it has not faced before.
Tehran / Artesh and AEOI
Tehran / Artesh and AEOI
Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation called the alleged Darkhovin strike a violation of international law, while the Artesh put Operation Saeqeh, its campaign against Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain, at phases 14 and 15 by 18 July. Domestic outlets Fars and Tabnak claim 16 Americans dead since February, a toll no source outside Iran supports.
CENTCOM / Washington
CENTCOM / Washington
CENTCOM confirmed two dead and one missing at Muwaffaq Salti on 17 July, when Jordan says its air defences intercepted eight of ten incoming missiles, against five of five stopped on 10 June. Its own strikes stay aimed at Iran's coast, interior and navy, not the Artesh campaign that killed them.