BSS
  23 Jun 2025, 22:27

Oil firms evacuate some Iraq staff over regional tensions: state-owned company

Collected photo

BASRA, Iraq, June 23, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Foreign oil firms including giants 
BP and TotalEnergies evacuated some foreign staff from southern Iraq amid 
regional tensions, the state-owned Basra Oil Company said Monday.

"Firms operating in the fields of the Basra Oil Company have temporarily 
evacuated some of their foreign personnel," the company said in a statement.

It added that operations were not affected in the southern province of Basra, 
which produces most of Iraq's crude oil.

The evacuations are due to the "security situation" in the region, an 
official from the company told AFP.

British energy giant BP, which is one of the biggest foreign players in 
Iraq's oil sector, evacuated staff from the huge Rumaila field.

The evacuation "has not affected" production since Iraqi staff are handling 
operations in coordination "remotely" with the British firm, Basra Oil 
Company said.

The Italian firm ENI "has gradually reduced its staff from 260 to 98 
employees", while France's TotalEnergies "evacuated 60 percent of its 
personnel in anticipation of an emergency", the Iraqi company said.

Russian oil giant Lukoil and Chinese companies have not evacuated their 
staff.

ENI said in a statement that it reduced its personnel in the Zubair oil field 
in southern Iraq "as a precautionary measure".

The firm added that it is monitoring the situation across the Middle East.

Iraq is a founding member of the OPEC cartel, and its crude oil sales make up 
90 percent of Iraq's budget revenues.

Since the start of the Iran-Israel war last week, fears have grown that the 
violence could spread to Iraq, where US troops are deployed as part of an 
anti-jihadist coalition and Iran supports several armed groups.

After the US attacked three Iranian nuclear facilities on Sunday, an Iranian 
official warned that bases in the region used in the attacks "will be 
considered legitimate targets".

Iran-backed armed factions in Iraq had also threatened Washington's interests 
in the region if it were to join Israel in its war against Iran.

Iraq, which has for years been navigating a delicate balancing act between 
its allies Tehran and Washington, has long been a fertile ground for proxy 
battles.