Iraq-Syria pipeline deal targets 2M bpd route outside Hormuz chokepoint
Original: Iraq and Syria sign agreement to restore oil pipeline that would provide alternative to Strait of Hormuz View original →
Iraq and Syria signed a memorandum to rehabilitate the Iraq-Syria crude oil pipeline, putting a 2M barrels-per-day alternative to the Strait of Hormuz back on the market's watchlist.
The U.S. State Department listed the Iraq-Syria crude oil pipeline media note on July 17, 2026. AP reported that U.S. companies and Iraq signed roughly $60B in agreements during the same Washington summit, including energy, infrastructure, healthcare, and communications projects.
For oil markets, the number that matters is capacity. AP reported the rehabilitated corridor would connect Iraq's Basra and Kirkuk network to Syria's Baniyas port and Turkey's Ceyhan route, with projected capacity of 2M bpd. CNBC's July 17 RSS item tied the agreement to continuing disruptions around Hormuz, the chokepoint that usually handles a large share of Gulf crude flows.
| Metric | Verified figure |
|---|---|
| Agreement date | July 17, 2026 |
| Broader U.S.-Iraq package | roughly $60B |
| Pipeline target | 2M bpd |
| Strategic issue | Strait of Hormuz bypass |
The project is not an immediate physical-flow change. Investors should track financing, security guarantees across Iraq and Syria, engineering timelines, and whether U.S. energy companies convert memoranda into binding construction commitments.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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