KEY POINTS
  • Turkey's runoff election is compounding delays to restart roughly 450,000 barrels per day of Iraqi crude oil exports shipped out of Turkish port Ceyhan.
  • Flows of Kirkuk crude down the Iraq-Turkey Pipeline linking the north of the Gulf country with Turkey's Ceyhan port in the Mediterranean have been paralyzed since March 25 by a legal dispute.
  • Resolution pends on the result of a second presidential vote this weekend, but Turkey could also take this opportunity to negotiate water and military issues, analysts say.
A satellite image showing the port of Ceyhan centred on August 18, 2015 in Turkey.

Turkey's runoff election is compounding delays to restart roughly 450,000 barrels per day of Iraqi crude oil exports, as Ankara studies its relationship with Baghdad, analysts and market sources told CNBC.

Oil typically flows through Turkey from both the Iraqi state and the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). More specifically, this Kirkuk crude flows down the Iraq-Turkey Pipeline linking the north of the Gulf country with Turkey's Ceyhan port in the Mediterranean. But the flows have been paralyzed since March 25 by a legal dispute involving federal Iraq, the KRG and Turkey.