Iraq's oil exports in May ran at an average of 2.225 million barrels a day, putting them on track for the biggest monthly volume since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime, head of the country's State Oil Marketing Organization, or SOMO, said Wednesday
Iraq's oil exports in May ran at an average of 2.225 million barrels a day, putting them on track for the biggest monthly volume since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime, head of the country's State Oil Marketing Organization, or SOMO, said Wednesday.

May marks the fifth straight month that Iraq's oil sales exceeded 2 million barrels a day thanks to gradual recovery in production and resumption of exports from the northern Kurdistan region. Iraq's total exports in April were 2.140 million barrels a day.

"Revenue from oil sales in May have exceeded the $7.342 billion that we earned in April," Falah Alamri, head of SOMO, told Dow Jones Newswires by telephone from Baghdad.

Basra Light exports flowed at 1.725 million barrels a day in May--up a touch on the 1.656 million barrels a day level in April. Kirkuk sales in May ran at 500,000 barrels a day, up from 483,333 barrels a day in April. Exports from Turkey's Ceyhan port were 490,000 barrels a day in May and the remainder was trucked to neighboring Jordan.