Main production area at El Sharara still held by armed tribesmen Libya’s National Oil Corp. says it will not resume normal operations until security has been restored BENGHAZI/LONDON: Libya’s National Oil Corp. on Friday urged all parties to avoid escalation at the El Sharara oilfield, the country’s largest, and said it would not resume normal operations until security had been restored. “Worker safety remains our primary concern,” NOC Chairman Mustafa Sanalla said in a statement. “We urge all parties to avoid conflict and the politicization of key infrastructure.” The eastern-based Libyan National Army said on Wednesday it had seized the 315,000-barrel-per-day (bpd) southwestern field from tribesmen and protesters who forced operations to halt when they took the site on Dec. 8. But an engineer at the field told Reuters that eastern forces were controlling only a pumping substation and that the main production area was still held by armed tribesmen. FASTFACTS Libya is losing $30 million a day due to the closure of the El Sharara oil field, the head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya said Thursday. The Libyan National Army (LNA), based in the east of the politically divided country, said earlier that it had seized the El Sharara field from tribesmen and protesters who forced operations to halt when they took the site on Dec. 8. The main production area is still occupied by armed tribesmen, a field engineer told Reuters on Thursday. The field manager had communicated with all parties in the vicinity of the site and urged restraint, the NOC said. In a statement, the LNA said any plane planning to take off or land in any airport in the south from midnight on Thursday would require approval from the air force operations room. It said this would apply to local or foreign flights, adding it would treat any aircraft contravening those orders as an enemy target. This effectively means the NOC would be unable to fly to El Sharara without permission from Haftar’s forces. Oil production in Libya, a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, has been disrupted since conflict broke out in 2011, with protesters and armed groups often targeting oilfields and energy infrastructure. National production now stands at under 1 million bpd, well below pre-2011 capacity of 1.6 million bpd.
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