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.
Atlas Copco’s role in Iraq transcends simple machinery sales. It is a foundational component of the nation’s industrial metabolism. By ensuring that compressed air flows through Basra’s pipelines and that gas is captured rather than flared, the company enables the very revenue that funds the Iraqi state. While the firm does not make headlines like political leaders or militias, its compressors are the silent heartbeat of reconstruction. The ultimate measure of Atlas Copco’s success in Iraq is not its quarterly earnings, but the degree to which it makes itself obsolete: by training local engineers and stabilizing infrastructure so that, one day, the country no longer requires foreign technicians to keep its industry alive. Until that distant day, Atlas Copco remains an essential, resilient partner in Iraq’s long march toward stability. atlas copco iraq
Additionally, the operational environment is hostile to sensitive electronics. The unreliable national power grid—which provides only a few hours of electricity per day in many provinces—forces Atlas Copco’s own equipment to run on dirty generator power, leading to voltage spikes that damage sensitive compressors. The company has had to adapt by offering "grid-tolerant" units and robust after-sales support, turning a liability into a service-revenue stream. The bedrock of Atlas Copco’s operations in Iraq
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. Atlas Copco provides the rotary screw and centrifugal