BASRA: Iraq could restore crude oil exports to around 3.4 million barrels per day within a week provided the Iran war ends and the Strait of Hormuz reopens, the head of the country’s state-run Basra Oil Company said.

Among Gulf oil producers, Iraq has suffered the biggest drop in oil revenue as a result of the effective closure of the Strait, an analysis has found, because it lacks alternative shipment routes. But the country, the second biggest producer in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, can quickly restore output to levels before U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran at the end of February led to the effective closure of the waterway. The Strait typically is the route for about a fifth of global oil and LNG flows.

Bassem Abdul Karim said Iran has so far provided only verbal guarantees that would allow Iraqi tankers permission to transit the Strait. We have not received any formal documents regarding permission for Iraqi tankers to pass, he said in an interview with Reuters.

He said production from Iraq’s southern oilfields was around 900,000 barrels per day, but if the war ends and safe passage through the Strait is guaranteed exports could reach 3.4 million bpd within a week.

Last month, Iraq’s oil production dropped by about 80pc to around 800,000 barrels per day, Iraqi energy officials said last month as the war meant Iraq could not export and storage tanks filled.

With limited outlets for Iraqi oil, production from the Rumaila field fell to around 400,000 bpd, down from about 1.35 million bpd before the conflict, and at the Zubair field the level was about 300,000 bpd, down 340,000 bpd before the war, Abdul Karim said.

Published in Dawn, April 7th, 2026

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