Competition is also intensifying. Chinese firms like Sullair and German rivals like Kaeser are aggressively pricing their equipment to win Iraqi market share. However, Atlas Copco retains an edge through its service network. In Iraq, where a single day of compressor downtime can cost an oil field millions in lost production, the premium for reliability is worth the price.
Operating in Iraq is not a standard commercial venture. The company has had to master what logistics experts call the "logistics of danger." Unlike a typical European or Asian market where technicians fly commercially and parts arrive by standard courier, Atlas Copco’s Iraqi operations require private security details, armored convoys, and fortified compounds, particularly in the volatile north (Kurdistan) and the historically contested south (Basra). atlas copco iraq
The bedrock of Atlas Copco’s operations in Iraq is the hydrocarbon sector. Iraq holds the world’s fifth-largest proven oil reserves, but its extraction and processing infrastructure remains decades behind its geological potential. Southern oil fields—such as Rumaila, West Qurna, and Zubair—require massive amounts of compressed air for pneumatic controls, instrument power, and drilling operations. Atlas Copco provides the rotary screw and centrifugal compressors that ensure these fields do not shut down due to pressure loss. Competition is also intensifying
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