Arab Times

Libya’s NOC shutting down El Sharara facility

-

TRIPOLI/BENGHAZI, Libya, Dec 10, (RTRS): Libya is shutting down production at its biggest oilfield after tribesmen and state security guards seized the El Sharara facility, field engineers and protesters said on Sunday, but there was no confirmati­on from state oil firm NOC.

If true, the shutdown at the 315,000 barrel-per-day field would also force the closure of the El-Feel oilfield, located in the same remote and lawless southern desert.

El-Feel usually pumps around 70,000 bpd.

One field engineer said production was being shut, without giving a time frame or figures.

A spokesman for the tribesmen which call themselves the Fezzan Anger Movement, Mohamed Maighal, also said the field was closed.

But, adding to the confusion amid two days of contradict­ing comments, an oil source said late on Sunday that the field was still operationa­l as NOC was trying to negotiate to avoid a full shutdown. He gave no output figure.

El Sharara lies in Libya’s remote southweste­rn desert where state authority is weak, chaos rampant and phone connection­s patchy, making it difficult to get reliable informatio­n.

NOC confirmed at noon only that guards had forced the closure of some pumps at El Bharara “which will result in on-site tanks filling within the next few hours and thus force a production shutdown,” a statement said.

NOC could not be reached for further comment and did not issue a new statement after the hours had passed which it had said would take to fill the tanks.

It warned of “catastroph­ic consequenc­es”.

“Shutting down production at the El Sharara field will have catastroph­ic, long-term consequenc­es, it would take a long time to resume production because of the sabotage and theft that are likely to happen,” NOC said in a statement.

The tribesmen stormed into the field premises on Saturday after NOC said some guards, supported by locals, had opened the gates, driving around in jeeps and filming themselves in video they sent to journalist­s.

They stayed overnight in the vast, partly unsecured area, making good on a threat to stop production issued first in October should authoritie­s not provide more developmen­t funds for their impoverish­ed region.

“We will not allow the El Sharara field to reopen unless the U.N. mediates,” Maighal said late Sunday afternoon.

He said their southern Fezzan region had suffered decades of neglect and demanded that the revenue of the oil produced from local fields be used to fund developmen­t projects.

NOC was scrambling to keep the field operating, working the phones from Tripoli, some 700 km (430 miles) to the north, and issuing a statement late on Saturday after a long silence saying the field had been occupied but remained “at present” open.

Officials were at the same time trying to exploit the time it takes to gradually turn off wells to negotiate a lastminute solution while accusing some guards of being criminals.

Field engineers say talks were complicate­d because the protesters were divided -- the tribesmen wanted developmen­t which would time to get under way.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait