Official: Fire Extinguished in Libya’s Al-Sidr Port
Firefighters work to put out the fire of a storage oil tank at the port of Es Sider in Ras Lanuf
Staff Writer, Al Arabiya News
Friday, 2 January 2015
A fire that has raged in the al-Sidra oil port in eastern Libya for one week has been put out, an official said, according to the Al Arabiya News Channel.
Al-Sider and its adjacent Ras Lanuf terminal have been closed since a group allied to a rival government in Tripoli moved three weeks ago to try and take them, part of a struggle between former rebels who helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but are now fighting for power and a share of oil reserves.
A week ago, a rocket hit al-Sider’s storages, destroying up to 1.8 million barrels of crude and at least two tanks, a top official said, according to Reuters news agency.
The battle for control of the oil ports is part of a wider struggle in the North African country which has had two governments since a group called Libya Dawn seized the capital in August by expelling a rival faction, installing its own prime minister and forcing the recognized premier, Abdullah al-Thinni, to operate out of the east with the elected House of Representatives.
The fighting has reduced Libya’s crude output to around 380,000 barrels a day, state-run National Oil Corp (NOC) has said.
Al-Sider is fed from fields run by Waha Oil Co, a joint-venture of NOC with U.S. firms Hess, Marathon and ConocoPhillips.
Thinni’s government had said this week it had contracted a U.S. firefighting firm for six million dollars. It was not clear whether it has arrived yet.
Libyan oil terminal fires from space. |
Staff Writer, Al Arabiya News
Friday, 2 January 2015
A fire that has raged in the al-Sidra oil port in eastern Libya for one week has been put out, an official said, according to the Al Arabiya News Channel.
Al-Sider and its adjacent Ras Lanuf terminal have been closed since a group allied to a rival government in Tripoli moved three weeks ago to try and take them, part of a struggle between former rebels who helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but are now fighting for power and a share of oil reserves.
A week ago, a rocket hit al-Sider’s storages, destroying up to 1.8 million barrels of crude and at least two tanks, a top official said, according to Reuters news agency.
The battle for control of the oil ports is part of a wider struggle in the North African country which has had two governments since a group called Libya Dawn seized the capital in August by expelling a rival faction, installing its own prime minister and forcing the recognized premier, Abdullah al-Thinni, to operate out of the east with the elected House of Representatives.
The fighting has reduced Libya’s crude output to around 380,000 barrels a day, state-run National Oil Corp (NOC) has said.
Al-Sider is fed from fields run by Waha Oil Co, a joint-venture of NOC with U.S. firms Hess, Marathon and ConocoPhillips.
Thinni’s government had said this week it had contracted a U.S. firefighting firm for six million dollars. It was not clear whether it has arrived yet.
No comments:
Post a Comment