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Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have restarted production at the Al-Khafji oil field in the neutral zone between the two countries, Turkey’s Anadolu Agency reported, citing a statement by the acting CEO of the Kuwait Gulf Oil Company.

The official Twitter account of the company posted an update yesterday, saying (via Google Translate) “Congratulations on the occasion of the resumption of production in joint abundance operations.”

An earlier report by Argus News from late June said Saudi Arabia and Kuwait had plans to restart both oilfields in the neutral zone—Al-Khafji and Wafra—this month.

Al-Khafji is one of four offshore and one onshore field located in the neutral zone between Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Of these, just two fields—Al-Khafji and Wafra—pumped half a million barrels daily until 2015.

Operational differences and a worsening in bilateral relations led to the suspension of production during that year. The worsening came as Saudi Arabia renewed Chevron’s concession for Wafra. According to the Kuwaiti side, Riyadh did that without consulting it.

Negotiations on the restart of the fields began in 2018, and Wafra and Al-Khafji began producing oil again in late 2019. However, in May, Kuwaiti media reported that production at Al-Khafji would be suspended in June as part of the OPEC+ agreement to curtail the global supply of crude oil by 9.7 million bpd in May and June.

The news of the restart is somewhat surprising, however, after OPEC+ agreed to extend the deep cuts through the end of July as prices did not react as favorably to the cuts as OPEC+ expected.

READ MORE: Saudi Arabia & Kuwait end dispute over shared oil fields, ‘won’t change’ OPEC commitments

Al-Khafji was pumping 300,000 bpd until 2015 when production in the neutral zone was suspended, and plans were to ramp this up to 325,000 bpd by the end of this year. Wafra has the capacity to produce 250,000 bpd of crude.

This article was originally published on Oilprice.com