TRIPOLI: Libya’s Arabian Gulf Oil Company has resumed output at up to 120,000 barrels per day (bpd) to meet domestic needs, while exports are still halted, engineers said on Sunday, after a standoff between factions shut most of the country’s oilfields.
On Saturday, the Arabian Gulf Oil Company, the operator of Libya’s Sarir, Messla and Nafoura oilfields, issued an instruction for production to restart.
The resumption, below the fields’ full capacity, is intended only to supply electricity and fuel plants for domestic needs, the engineers told Reuters. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.
Factions in the east of Libya, where oil production is concentrated, shut output down in August after factions dominant in western Libya ousted veteran Central Bank of Libya governor Sadiq Al-Kabir and replaced him with a rival board.
Libya’s Arabian Gulf Oil Co. fields resume output at up to 120,000 bpd
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Libya’s Arabian Gulf Oil Co. fields resume output at up to 120,000 bpd
- The resumption, below the fields’ full capacity, is intended only to supply electricity and fuel plants for domestic needs
- Factions in the east of Libya, where oil production is concentrated, shut output down in August
Air strike hits Iraq base housing pro-Iran group: faction source
- The Jurf Al-Nasr base has been struck several times since the start of the war
BAGHDAD: An air strike hit a military base in southern Iraq housing the Iran-backed Kataeb Hezbollah group on Tuesday, a source from the armed faction said.
The Jurf Al-Nasr base, which serves as one of the main bastions of the powerful Tehran-backed group, has been struck several times since the start of the war in the Middle East.
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