Oil Daily | Iraq Approves Compensation Plan to Restart Kurdistan Oil Exports, Aiming to Resolve Dispute
Generado por agente de IAAinvest Market Brief
lunes, 3 de febrero de 2025, 7:01 am ET1 min de lectura
BP--
【Global Oil Supply and Demand】
Vitol forecasts crude oil demand will remain stable over the next 15 years, peaking at 110 million barrels daily before declining to 105 million by 2040. This contrasts with the International Energy Agency's prediction of a peak at 105 million barrels in four years. BP expects a decline to 91.4 million barrels by 2040. Despite these forecasts, the energy transition continues, with gasoline demand expected to drop, mainly offset by petrochemical demand growing by 6 million barrels daily by 2040. Liquefied petroleum gas demand is also projected to rise.
【Oil-Producing Countries Dynamics】
Iraq's parliament approved a plan to compensate oil companies in Kurdistan, aiming to restart crude exports from the region. MPs agreed on a $16 per barrel compensation, an improvement from previous proposals but lower than the current rate. This decision is vital for resuming exports and resolving disputes between Baghdad and the Kurdish government in Erbil. The prolonged suspension of Kurdish oil exports has been costly, with losses estimated at $37.5 million daily. The issue partly stems from an ICC ruling restricting Kurdish oil exports without Iraq's federal approval.
Vitol forecasts crude oil demand will remain stable over the next 15 years, peaking at 110 million barrels daily before declining to 105 million by 2040. This contrasts with the International Energy Agency's prediction of a peak at 105 million barrels in four years. BP expects a decline to 91.4 million barrels by 2040. Despite these forecasts, the energy transition continues, with gasoline demand expected to drop, mainly offset by petrochemical demand growing by 6 million barrels daily by 2040. Liquefied petroleum gas demand is also projected to rise.
【Oil-Producing Countries Dynamics】
Iraq's parliament approved a plan to compensate oil companies in Kurdistan, aiming to restart crude exports from the region. MPs agreed on a $16 per barrel compensation, an improvement from previous proposals but lower than the current rate. This decision is vital for resuming exports and resolving disputes between Baghdad and the Kurdish government in Erbil. The prolonged suspension of Kurdish oil exports has been costly, with losses estimated at $37.5 million daily. The issue partly stems from an ICC ruling restricting Kurdish oil exports without Iraq's federal approval.

Divulgación editorial y transparencia de la IA: Ainvest News utiliza tecnología avanzada de Modelos de Lenguaje Largo (LLM) para sintetizar y analizar datos de mercado en tiempo real. Para garantizar los más altos estándares de integridad, cada artículo se somete a un riguroso proceso de verificación con participación humana.
Mientras la IA asiste en el procesamiento de datos y la redacción inicial, un miembro editorial profesional de Ainvest revisa, verifica y aprueba de forma independiente todo el contenido para garantizar su precisión y cumplimiento con los estándares editoriales de Ainvest Fintech Inc. Esta supervisión humana está diseñada para mitigar las alucinaciones de la IA y garantizar el contexto financiero.
Advertencia sobre inversiones: Este contenido se proporciona únicamente con fines informativos y no constituye asesoramiento profesional de inversión, legal o financiero. Los mercados conllevan riesgos inherentes. Se recomienda a los usuarios que realicen una investigación independiente o consulten a un asesor financiero certificado antes de tomar cualquier decisión. Ainvest Fintech Inc. se exime de toda responsabilidad por las acciones tomadas con base en esta información. ¿Encontró un error? Reportar un problema

Comentarios
Aún no hay comentarios