BAGHDAD: Iraq’s oil output in Kurdistan is set to increase when Norway’s DNO completes its plans to add four new wells in the Tawke field. The company has already completed three wells and drilling the last one, which should come online next week.
The four wells will add 10 percent to the daily production capacity of the field, DNO said. In the third quarter of the year, output from Tawke averaged 109,000 barrels of crude daily. Most of this was exported via Turkey. The four new wells, which cost it around US$20 million in total, are part of the Norwegian company’s plan to boost production at the Tawke announced earlier this year. In the next few months, the company will drill more wells, aiming to bring the total from the field to 135,000 bpd.
DNO’s plans for its Iraqi operations are unfolding amid record exports from OPEC’s second-largest producer, which last month reached 3.276 million bpd, thanks in part to the renewed shipments via the Turkish port of Ceyhan, following an agreement between Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government. These were the first Ceyhan shipments in over a year, according to the Iraq Oil Report. In August, Iraq exported 3.23 million bpd.