The National - News

Libya designing ‘attractive’ oil and gas bid round for fourth quarter

- JOHN BENNY Tripoli

Libya is designing an oil and gas bidding round, expected to be held in the fourth quarter of this year, that is “very attractive” for investors, a member of the National Oil Corporatio­n’s board has said.

The licensing round would be the country’s first since 2007 as it looks to boost production and exports after more than a decade of political instabilit­y that paralysed exploratio­n activity for new resources.

“We’re working towards the objective quite aggressive­ly right now,” said Khalifa Abdulsadiq at the Libya Energy and Economic Summit in Tripoli.

“We’re developing the database, identifyin­g the areas and also benchmarki­ng the fiscal terms against the neighbouri­ng countries [and] across the region,” he said during a panel session.

Mr Abdulsadiq said the bidding round was “long overdue” and that it would be key to sustaining Libya’s production levels in the future.

He also said that the NOC could reach its short-term production target of 2 million barrels per day using the company’s existing assets.

The state-owned energy company produces about 1.2 million bpd currently.

“What we need to do is just reinforce the brownfield developmen­t and reactivate shut-in [oil] wells,” Mr Abdulsadiq said.

He also said the country’s pipelines and harbours, which were originally built in the 1960s, needed a turnaround.

Libya, which has the largest crude reserves in Africa, has had little peace since the 2011 Nato-backed uprising against Muammar Qaddafi and the country split in 2014 between warring eastern and western factions. Major fighting stopped after a ceasefire in 2020.

An oil blockade that year imposed by eastern Libyan military leader Khalifa Haftar cost Tripoli $6 billion in lost oil revenues. Protests by local groups have also threatened to bring the country’s oil production to a standstill.

Last week, the NOC declared force majeure at the 300,000 bpd-Sharara oilfield, the country’s largest, after its shutdown by protesters. Some groups have also threatened to shut down two oil and gas units near the Libyan capital Tripoli.

Libya is “extremely competitiv­e” from a hydrocarbo­ns perspectiv­e and in its access to premium markets, but infrastruc­ture can be further improved, Antonio Baldassarr­e, managing director of Eni North Africa, told the panel. He said Libya needed to regain the confidence of services companies, who help energy companies with exploratio­n and transport.

Libya’s government has committed $12 billion to step up oil production in the country, with another $5 billion expected from the Libyan Investment Authority.

In a separate session, Libyan Economy Minister Mohamed Al Hwej said LIA’s assets frozen by sanctions overseas could be used to invest in the country’s oil sector.

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