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Libya Says Its Oil Output at Most Since 2013 Can Go Even Higher

Libya Says Its Oil Output at Most Since 2013 Can Go Even Higher

(Bloomberg) -- Libya’s oil production climbed to the highest since 2013 and can go even higher if security at the nation’s energy facilities can be improved, according to the chairman of the state-run National Oil Corp.

Output was recently 1.278 million barrels a day and can be increased by “hundreds of thousands” of barrels a day with improved security, Mustafa Sanalla said in response to questions. Still, continued instability in the country with Africa’s largest oil reserves means the NOC may have to revise its 2022 production target of more than 2 million barrels a day, he said.

“Threats to NOC are numerous,” Sanalla said. “If the security situation improves, our production outlook is very good.”

A string of security incidents has hobbled Libya’s oil production despite repeated attempts to restore flows in the politically divided nation. Output at the country’s biggest oil field, Sharara, declined in July after an armed group kidnapped four of the staff. Libya bounced back the following month, helping OPEC’s crude production rise to a nine-month high, according to the International Energy Agency.

The oil market currently has a “supply shortfall,” which is likely to push prices higher, Sanalla said.

A deadly Islamic State attack on NOC’s headquarters in Tripoli this month “exposes the fragility of security arrangements in Libya, thereby opening a space for terrorist organizations to exist,” he said. The attack left two employees dead and dozens wounded, and Islamic State declared Libya’s oil fields a “legitimate target.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Salma El Wardany in Algiers at selwardany@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nayla Razzouk at nrazzouk2@bloomberg.net, Claudia Carpenter, James Herron

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.