Libya’s NOC suspends loading at eastern ports from July 1 due to 'force majeure'

  • 6/30/2018
  • 00:00
  • 6
  • 0
  • 0
news-picture

File photo showing an oil installation on fire in eastern Libya. (Reuters) Updated 39 sec ago Reuters June 29, 2018 16:15 210 The NOC said blockages at the ports may also force Sarir refinery to cease operations, which would restrict local fuel supplies. Fighting between the LNA and rival factions shut down the ports of Ras Lanuf and Es Sider, reducing production by around 450,000 bpd. TUNIS: Libya’s National Oil Corporation said on Friday it anticipated declaring force majeure on loadings from the eastern ports of Zueitina and Hariga from July 1.“This step will have to be taken due to insufficient storage capacity, and because the Libyan National Army (LNA) General Command has prevented legitimate allocations being loaded by blocking vessel entry to ports,” the Tripoli-based NOC said in a statement.The move would cause an output loss of 350,000 barrels per day (bpd), increasing the total disruption loss at eastern ports to 800,000 bpd, the NOC based in Tripoli said in a statement. The NOC said blockages at the ports may also force Sarir refinery to cease operations, which would restrict local fuel supplies. Earlier this month fighting between the LNA and rival factions shut down the ports of Ras Lanuf and Es Sider, reducing production by around 450,000 bpd. After the LNA regained those two terminals it announced it would hand control of all eastern ports and oilfields to a parallel NOC based in the eastern city of Benghazi, raising the prospect of prolonged disruption to Libya’s national production, which was previously more than one million bpd. NOC Benghazi said it was ordering port workers not to load tankers that it had not authorized, holding up loadings booked by NOC Tripoli at Zueitina and Hariga from Thursday. The NOC in Tripoli, which is internationally recognized under UN Security Council resolutions, said blockages at the ports may force the Sarir refinery to cease operations, which would restrict local fuel supplies. It said that eastern-based NOC subsidiaries, Arabian Gulf Oil Company (AGOCO) and Zueitina Oil Co, had taken steps to limit any pipeline damage that could result from limited storage capacity. “NOC calls upon the LNA General Command, alongside whom it has previously worked in the national interest, to end the blockade,” the NOC statement said. “The impact of the on-going standoff to the national deficit is considerable and unsustainable.”

مشاركة :