Oil revenue from Iraq’s self-governing Kurdish region dropped more than half last month after a pipeline used to transport crude through Turkey was attacked, further hurting the cash-strapped enclave’s efforts to battle Islamic State militants. Revenue dropped to $303.9 million on oil sales of 10.15 million barrels in February, or 350,067 barrels a day, the Kurdistan Regional Government said in a monthly report on Monday. In January, revenue was $650 million on oil sales of 18.66 million barrels, or 601,811 barrels a day. Crude exports from the Kurdish region through the Turkish port of Ceyhan stopped on Feb. 18, and the pipeline still isn’t operating, it said in the monthly report. Iraq’s minority Kurds are independently developing oil reserves they say may total 45 billion barrels — equivalent to almost a third of Iraq’s total deposits, according to data from BP Plc. The KRG, which is waging a costly […]