US oil firms sign deals with Iraq to develop alternative shipping routes
[July 18, 2026] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. companies signed roughly $60 billion in
agreements and partnerships with the Iraqi government Friday, including
deals intended to create alternative routes for shipping oil out of the
Persian Gulf.
The deals, signed at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, also involved other
industries, including healthcare, communications and infrastructure.
It's not clear when the oil deals will be able to create viable
alternatives to the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the
world's oil flows. Goldman Sachs estimates that pipelines in just one
country take at least two and a half years to build, and these pipelines
would travel through two or more nations.
Iran has sought to close the Strait repeatedly since the U.S.-Iran war
began Feb. 28, causing sharp gyrations in oil and gas prices.
On Friday afternoon, the price of West Texas crude rose nearly 5% to $88
a barrel, up from about $67 before the war began. It had topped $110 in
early April before falling back after a truce was reached. It has since
risen on renewed conflict between U.S. and Iran.
Thomas Barrack, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, said the oil pipeline
agreements would lead to a program “that will make the Strait of Hormuz
an afterthought.”

The signings followed a meeting between Iraqi Prime Minister Ali Falah
al-Zaidi Thursday with executives of Chevron in Houston, at which al-Zaidi
urged the U.S. energy company to expand and accelerate its investments
in Iraq.
In a speech Friday, al-Zaidi said Iraq’s economy is seeking long-term
investment and partnerships, not merely contractors to carry out
projects.
Al-Zaidi stressed his government’s commitment to communication, dialogue
and cooperation with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, describing it as “the
place where economic decisions are made."
On Friday, Chevron signed three agreements with the Iraqi government.
Jake Spiering, Chevron's president of corporate business development,
said two would focus on boosting oil production, while a third would
involve “investing in a pipeline that’s going to create another export
route out of Iraq to world markets. This is very important for energy
security.”
Also Friday, the State Department welcomed an agreement between Iraq and
Syria “to advance the rehabilitation and reconstruction of the
Iraq-Syria crude oil pipeline as a priority infrastructure project."
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Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi speaks at the U.S. Iraq Business
Summit at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Friday, July 17, 2026, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.)
 “The United States welcomes the
engagement of a U.S.-led international consortium to execute the
technical and financial aspects of this project,” the department
said.
The pipeline will connect southern Iraq’s Basra to western Iraq’s
Haditha and go from there to the Ceyhan port in Turkey and the port
of Baniyas on Syria’s coast, Iraqi officials have said. The pipeline
is projected to carry about 2 million barrels of oil per day.
In a note released earlier this week, analysts at Goldman Sachs
estimated that seven different pipelines in the region under
development could, by the end of 2028, carry about 60% of the oil
currently shipped through the Strait.
The pipelines could carry roughly 14 million barrels per day by
then, Goldman estimated. Roughly 23 million barrels per day were
shipped through Hormuz before the Iran war.
After the U.S. and Israel launched their war on Iran Feb. 28,
oil-rich Iraq — which is home to both Iran-backed militias and U.S.
bases — found itself in the crosshairs. Syria, meanwhile, has been
one of the few regional countries that has managed to stay on the
sidelines of the conflict. Damascus has promoted Syria — still
grappling with the aftermath of its own 14-year civil war — as a
bastion of stability and has offered it as an alternative transit
route for energy shipments.
With the war dramatically reducing oil exports through the Strait of
Hormuz, some oil shipments have instead been trucked from Iraq into
Syria and shipped to European markets via Syria’s Baniyas port,
bypassing the Hormuz route. A key border crossing between northern
Iraq and Syria reopened in April after being closed for more than a
decade, with officials touting it as an additional route for energy
exports.
The overland route is less efficient and more expensive than
shipping exports through the strait. The pipeline project envisioned
would allow for exporting a larger volume of oil from Iraq to Syria
and Turkey.
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