With just two days remaining to the expiration of a thirty-day U.S. waiver to import Iranian gas and electricity, the Iraqi Minister of Electricity says it will take three to four years for the country to stop importing energy from Iran.
Luay al-Khateeb said that it would take several years for the country’s oil and gas projects to reach production capacity and end its dependency on Iranian gas.
“Those three to four years need to be an uninterrupted timeline with a government that enjoys full executive authority and no interference from political entities and in an environment that is welcoming to investments and multinational participation”, Luay al-Khateeb said.
The United States has repeatedly granted waivers to Baghdad to keep importing Iranian gas and electricity despite its sanctions on Tehran. The last waiver was limited to a thirty-day exemption which soon expires.
Iraq was expected to invest $ 10 billion in its oil and gas projects to end its dependency on Iran within four years. Nevertheless, none of the projects are have made headway.
Meanwhile, Iran’s official statistics show a significant increase in the country’s electricity and gas exports, and Iraqi officials have made contradictory statements about energy imports from the neighboring country.
For example, on April 20, a spokesman for the Iraqi Ministry of Electricity, Ahmed Al-Abadi, announced that Iraq has reduced its electricity and gas imports from Iran by 75 percent after approaching self-sufficiency in its own energy production.
Iraq has always been a customer of more than eighty percent of Iran’s electricity exports. Iranian Ministry of Energy numbers show the country’s electricity exports increased by more than 28 percent in 2019, reaching more than eight terawatts per hour. However, Iran’s official statistics are always questioned by experts and are largely inconsistent with international data.
Statistics from the National Iranian Gas Company also show that the country’s gas exports increased by 26 percent last Iranian calendar year (March 21, 2019, March 20, 2020) and reached 17.5 billion cubic meters.
Iraq and Turkey are the only customers of Iranian gas, and since Turkish data do not indicate an increase in gas imports from Iran, the growth should be tied to more exports to Iraq.
In the meantime, both Tehran and Baghdad have confirmed that last winter Iran’s gas exports to Iraq dropped seven times reaching about three to four million cubic meters per day. In the hot season of last year, there was no evidence of an increase in Iran’s gas exports to Iraq, and it is not clear how Iran’s gas exports grew by 26 percent.
Iran has a daily export contract of 50 million cubic meters (more than 18 billion cubic meters per year) of gas with Iraq, but only about half of that gas is delivered for consumption at power plants.
“The country can import up to 1,200 MW of electricity per year and up to about 1.2 Bscf/d during peak usage in the hot summer months when temperatures in the southern part of the country can soar to 50 Celsius. Electricity supply was estimated at 19 GW in 2019 and forecast to reach 20 GW in 2020, while power demand in peak time is around 25 GW”, Luay al-Khateeb, told S&P Global Platts.
To provide additional electricity, Iraq imports both electricity directly from Iran and gas that it uses in its power plants, but still faces a shortage during the hot seasons.
According to World Bank data, due to the lack of gas collection equipment in Iraq’s oil fields, eighteen billion cubic meters of “associated petroleum gas” produced are burned and wasted annually.
Assisted by Western companies, it has been years since Iraq embarked on large-scale projects to collect associated gases in its oil fields. Recently, the Iraqi Oil Minister, Thamer Ghadhban, announced that two contracts had been signed last year for the daily collection of 21 million cubic meters of gas from the Halfaya and Ratawi oil fields.
Backed by other projects, Ghadhban said, 28 million cubic meters per day (10 billion cubic meters per year) will be added to the country’s gas production. Yet, he did not say when the projects would be operational.
Earlier in 2018, Iraq had also promised similar projects that would end its dependency on Iranian gas. However, none of the promised projects has had much progress so far.
In the meantime, the country’s projects appear to be slowing down, and falling oil prices have exerted heavy pressure on Baghdad in recent months.
Based on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates, the Iraqi government needs oil prices to be fixed at above $ 60 a barrel to avoid a budget deficit, while Brent oil prices are around $ 20 today.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecast shows that the Iraqi government will be struggling with a budget deficit equal to 23.3 percent ($ 40 billion) of its gross domestic product in 2020.