Fuel shortages in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region will last for at least another week, government officials said on Sunday, as sweeping advances by Sunni Muslim militants further south put a heavy strain on supply lines.
Queues of motorists, some up to 2 km (1.2 miles) long, have been one of the most visible signs of the militants’ battlefield successes in Iraq for the people of Kurdistan’s regional capital Arbil, a city filled with new office blocks and Western oil workers barely an hour’s drive from Mosul, now in rebel hands.
The fuel shortages have exacerbated pressure on an economy already strained by central government budget cuts and virtual civil war on Iraqi Kurdistan’s southern border.
An influx of displaced families, an attack by the militants of the Islamic State of Syria and the Levant (ISIL) on Iraq’s largest refinery and fuel smuggling into insurgent-controlled towns have all hit supplies, though government officials say the situation is slowly easing.
“We are not dependent on Iraq for our fuel, we have our own refineries,” one regional government (KRG) official said.
“We expect fuel supplies to be better in the coming weeks. Already the lines are going down,” he said, adding a coupon system would be introduced soon to help ration supplies.
Motorists have already been limited to just 30 litres of gasoline or diesel every second day, with fuel supplies prioritised for ambulances and the KRG’s ‘Peshmerga’ soldiers as they fight a series of border skirmishes with ISIL-led groups.
While heavily-subsidised fuel prices have largely remained steady, many taxi drivers are increasing fares due to the time spent waiting to fill their cars. Motorists in Arbil on Sunday said the average line was around three hours long.
“You can’t work for long without petrol, we need to drive,” said Mirin Ahmed, a civil engineer sitting in a queue in his Toyota Land Cruiser at a filling station just outside the city’s Christian sector on Sunday.
While fuel shortages are relatively common in other parts of Iraq following years of violence and under-investment, the Kurdish region has in recent years presented itself as a stable environment for Western firms to do business.
Energy companies such as Gulf Keystone Petroleum and Genel Energy have been some of the biggest investors in the region, hoping to drill what is seen as one of the biggest potential onshore deposits that is still relatively untapped.
Reuters
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