Iraq has cancelled the loading of three crude oil cargoes from Lukoil in November, two market sources told Reuters on Tuesday citing concerns over US and UK sanctions on the Russian oil company.
Iraq's state firm SOMO cancelled cargoes from Lukoil's equity production at the West Qurna-2 field, the sources said.
The cargoes had been meant to load on November 11, 18 and 26, the sources said. Lukoil and SOMO were not immediately available for comment.
Last month, US President Donald Trump imposed sanctions on Russia's largest oil companies, Lukoil and Rosneft, in Washington's toughest measures on Russian business since the start of the war in Ukraine.
On October 15, Britain also targeted Lukoil and Rosneft, as well as 44 so-called shadow fleet tankers, mainly consisting of aging tankers with opaque ownership, in what it described as a new bid to tighten energy sanctions and choke off Kremlin revenue.
Moscow-headquartered Lukoil accounts for around 2% of global output. Its name derives from three oil towns in Lukoil's traditional exploration region of western Siberia: Langepas, Urai and Kogalym.
Its biggest foreign asset is Iraq's West Qurna 2 oil field, one of the world's largest, in which it holds a 75% stake.
The oil field's output topped 480,000 bpd in April, Russia's Interfax news agency reported.
The company owns the 190,000 bpd Lukoil Neftohim Burgas refinery in Bulgaria, the largest in the Balkans, as well as the Petrotel oil refinery in Romania.
Lukoil supplies oil to Hungary and Slovakia, as well as to Türkiye's STAR refinery owned by Azerbaijan's SOCAR, which depends heavily on Russian crude.
The company also has stakes in oil terminals as well as retail fuel chains in Europe and has various upstream and downstream projects in Central Asia, including Kazakhstan, and in Africa and Latin America.