Basra: Kuwait Energy PLC started on Wednesday producing natural gas from Siba, the first gasfield to be brought on stream in the south of Iraq, an Iraqi oil executive told Reuters.

Siba began producing gas at an initial rate of 25 million cubic feet (mcf) a day, which should rise gradually to 100 mcf/d by the end of the year, said Kareem Abd Oda, the director general of the joint venture established by Iraq and Kuwait Energy to develop the field.

Siba, located south of the city of Basra, is producing natural gas and gas condensates, he added.

The other hydrocarbon reservoirs of southern Iraq that are already in operation produce natural gas alongside crude oil.

The gas extracted in several of these fields is flared instead of being captured as the country lacks the capacity to process it into fuel for local consumption or exports.

The semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government has started producing natural gas from fields in northern Iraq.

Iraq hopes by 2021 to end gas flaring, which costs nearly $2.5 billion (Dh9.2 billion) in lost revenue for the government and would be sufficient to meet most of its unmet needs for gas-based power generation, according to the World Bank.

Iraq is the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ second-largest producer after Saudi Arabia.

Companies, including BP, Exxon Mobil, Eni, Total, Royal Dutch Shell and Lukoil, helped Iraq expand production in the past decade by more than 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd) to about 4.7 million bpd.