伊拉克将西古尔纳2号油田的运营权从卢克石油公司移交给巴士拉石油公司。

2026年2月23日

莫斯科(WO)——伊拉克内阁已批准与俄罗斯卢克石油公司达成协议,将西古尔纳2号油田的石油生产业务移交给巴士拉石油公司,这标志着该国最大的上游资产之一的管理发生了重大转变。

内阁称该协议为“友好和解”,涵盖未结清的发票和外籍人员的雇佣问题,并已由外部审计师核实。内阁还表示,外籍员工的工资税将作为国家财政的最终收入。

今年早些时候,内阁批准根据现有服务和开发合同的条款,将西古尔纳2号油田的管理权移交给巴士拉石油公司。当局还批准通过马季努恩油田账户为石油作业提供资金,该账户将由国家石油营销组织(SOMO)销售原油的收入补充。

西古尔纳2号油田目前日产量约为46万桶,约占全球石油供应量的0.5%。该油田初始可采储量约为140亿桶,此前预计日产量将提升至80万桶。

该油田是根据2010年1月签署的一份为期25年的技术服务合同进行开发的。卢克石油公司持有75%的股份,而伊拉克国有北方石油公司持有25%的股份。卢克石油公司为该项目的资本支出提供资金,并通过石油产量分成获得回报,此外还有与每桶1.15美元的费用和利润税义务挂钩的报酬。

2025年10月,受英国和美国制裁的影响,卢克石油公司宣布西古尔纳2号油田合同遭遇不可抗力,并宣布计划剥离其国际资产。此前媒体报道称,美国政府倾向于将这些资产出售给一家美国公司,从而缩小了潜在买家的范围。

据报道,伊拉克石油部已与几家美国主要石油生产商接洽,商讨卢克石油公司可能转让其股份的事宜。路透社报道称,雪佛龙公司已表示对此感兴趣,但会在推进交易前寻求修改合同条款。

1 月下旬,卢克石油公司表示,已达成协议将其大部分国际资产(哈萨克斯坦除外)出售给美国投资公司凯雷集团,同时继续与其他潜在买家进行谈判。

内阁的批准正式确定了西古尔纳 2 号油田的运营过渡,伊拉克正努力在不断变化的地缘政治和商业压力下,确保对这一战略生产资产的长期管理。

原文链接/WorldOil

Iraq shifts West Qurna 2 operatorship from Lukoil to Basra Oil

February 23, 2026

MOSCOW (WO) — Iraq’s cabinet has approved an agreement with Russia’s Lukoil to transfer oil production operations at the West Qurna 2 field to Basra Oil Company, marking a major shift in management of one of the country’s largest upstream assets.

The cabinet described the deal as an “amicable settlement” covering outstanding invoices and the employment of foreign personnel, as verified by an external auditor. It also stated that taxes on foreign employees’ pay will be treated as final revenue for the state treasury.

Earlier this year, the cabinet approved transferring management of West Qurna 2 to Basra Oil Company under the terms of the existing service and development contract. Authorities also approved financing oil operations through the Majnoon field account, which is to be supplemented by revenues from crude marketed by SOMO.

West Qurna 2 currently produces about 460,000 bpd, representing nearly 0.5% of global oil supply. The field holds initial recoverable reserves of approximately 14 Bbbl and had been expected to ramp up production to 800,000 bpd.

The field has been developed under a 25-year technical service contract signed in January 2010. Lukoil holds a 75% stake, while Iraq’s state-owned North Oil Company owns 25%. Lukoil has financed the project’s capital expenditures and receives reimbursement through a share of oil production, along with remuneration tied to a $1.15-per-barrel fee and profit tax obligations.

In October 2025, following UK and U.S. sanctions, Lukoil declared force majeure on the West Qurna 2 contract and announced plans to divest its international assets. According to prior media reports, the U.S. administration has favored a sale of those assets to an American company, narrowing the potential buyer pool.

Iraq’s Oil Ministry has reportedly approached several leading U.S. producers regarding a potential transfer of Lukoil’s stake. Chevron Corp. has expressed interest in the field but would seek revised contract terms before proceeding, according to Reuters.

In late January, Lukoil said it had reached an agreement to sell most of its international assets — excluding Kazakhstan — to U.S. investment firm Carlyle Group, while continuing talks with other potential buyers.

The cabinet’s approval formalizes the operational transition at West Qurna 2 as Iraq moves to secure long-term management of a strategic producing asset amid shifting geopolitical and commercial pressures.