Kuwait Times

Libya oil exports threatened as NOC warns against a port deal

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Libya’s hopes to boost crude exports have been dealt a blow after the head of the National Oil Corporatio­n (NOC) objected to a deal between the government and local guards to reopen key ports. In a letter seen by Reuters to UN Libya envoy Martin Kobler and a number of oil and diplomatic officials, NOC chairman Mustafa Sanalla said it was a mistake to reward Ibrahim Jathran, head of the Petroleum Facilities Guard (PFG), for a blockade of the oil ports of Ras Lanuf, Es Sider and Zueitina. The PFG confirmed on Friday that it would implement an agreement with Libya’s UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) to reopen the ports within days, following a visit by Kobler to meet Jathran in Ras Lanuf.

The terms for ending the blockade have not been made public, but an initial payment for salaries for Jathran’s men has been agreed, sources familiar with the matter say. In the letter, Sanalla said the deal included payments that would encourage other groups to disrupt oil operations in the hopes of a similar payout. “It sets a terrible precedent and will encourage anybody who can muster a militia to shut down a pipeline, an oilfield, or a port, to see what they can extort,” the letter said.

Sanalla said the NOC would not lift force majeure at export terminals if a payout went through due to the risk that the corporatio­n would face liabilitie­s. Should any court cases arise internatio­nally for losses stemming from the blockade, “we, as NOC, are determined not to be attached to these lawsuits”, the letter said. The NOC also threatened to withdraw its recognitio­n of the GNA’s leadership, or Presidenti­al Council. Ali Al-Hassi, a PFG spokesman, would not confirm whether any money had been received, but said the guards’ salaries should be paid now that the force was fulfilling its promise to open the ports.

Turmoil for years

OPEC member Libya has been in turmoil for years, with rival government­s and complex alliances of armed groups vying for power and a share of the country’s significan­t oil wealth. Armed factions, labor disputes and security threats have helped slash oil output to less than a quarter of the 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd) seen before the 2011 uprising against Muammar Gaddafi.

Sanalla’s letter said that due to attacks from Islamic State militants and other damage, exports from the ports would struggle to surpass 100,000 bpd in the near term, a fraction of their designed capacity. He added that NOC’s largest subsidiary, Agoco, would be able to increase production by that amount if it received its operationa­l budget from the government.

“To pay Jathran instead of Agoco makes no sense, politicall­y, economical­ly or legally,” Sanalla said. Asked about the terms of any deal with the PFG, Ahmed Maiteeg, a member of the GNA’s Presidenti­al Council, said only that he hoped the ports would open soon so Libya could earn badly needed foreign currency.—Reuters

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