Iraq and Jordan have inaugurated a joint industrial area on the border between the neighboring countries. The ceremony on the Iraq-Jordan border was attended by Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi and his Jordanian counterpart Omar Razzaz. Saturdays meeting was also attended by top officials as the former neighbors boost their relations following the defeat of the ISIS terrorist group that controlled areas in Iraq bordering Jordan. The border crossing was formally reopened Saturday. As part of the agreement between the two countries that was signed in late December, Iraq will supply Jordan with oil a day at a lower price. Under the deal, Iraq would sell 10,000 barrels per day of oil to Jordan at a special price, transported by tanker from its Kirkuk oilfields, the Jordanian prime minister’s office said in a statement. It did not say what the price was or when the oil would be exported. Iraqi goods imported via Jordan’s Aqaba port on the Red Sea would meanwhile receive preferential tariffs, it said. Aqaba port at the north end of the Red Sea has long been a major transit route for Iraqi imports and exports, and Amman has long relied on Iraqi crude to fuel its economy. Razzaz’s office also said Jordan would begin to export electricity to Iraq within the next two years. Abdul Mahdi says the government aims to decrease dependency on oil exports for state revenue. Oil exports from OPEC’s second-largest producer account for more than 95 percent of state revenues. Furthermore, Abdul-Mahdis office said Iraqi officials were handed 1,300 pieces of antiquities that Jordanian authorities confiscated from smugglers.
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