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Libya’s Political Crisis Risks Resurgence of Oil Supply Turmoil

Libya’s Political Crisis Risks Resurgence of Oil Supply Turmoil
  • PublishedAugust 30, 2024

Libya’s ongoing political feud poses a major threat to the stability of its oil production, raising fears of a return to the chaos that has long plagued the OPEC member since the fall of dictator Moammar Al Qaddafi.

The North African nation’s crude output was slashed in half this week as authorities in the east shuttered more than 500,000 barrels a day amid a fight with the Tripoli-based government for control of the central bank. All the nation’s eastern export terminals closed on Thursday.

The disruption could swell to 1 million barrels a day, according to consultants Rapidan Energy Group. That would amount to roughly 1% of global supply. It would also mark a major fracturing of a 2021 political arrangement brokered by the United Nations to reconcile the two rival camps.

“Even if a compromise is reached on control of the central bank, it seems like the fragile deal that has provided relative stability to Libya’s oil sector for the last few years is breaking down,” said Richard Bronze, head of geopolitics at consultant Energy Aspects Ltd. “Output is likely to be more volatile and prone to outages heading into 2025.”

Eastern authorities froze oil exports after the UN-recognized government in Tripoli led by Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah replaced Sadiq Al-Kabir, governor of the central bank. The institution manages billions of dollars of oil revenues on behalf of the two opposed governments.

Global oil prices are starting to flicker, with Brent futures climbing above $80 a barrel earlier this week following the announcement of the output curtailments, and traded above that level on Friday. With traders focused on faltering demand growth in China and plentiful supplies from across the Americas, the benchmark remains over 5% lower from levels in early July. Should Libya’s losses persist, the price response may intensify.

Michelle Larsen

Michelle Larsen is a 23-year-old journalist and editor for Wyoming Star. Michelle has covered a variety of topics on both local (crime, politics, environment, sports in the USA) and global issues (USA around the globe; Middle East tensions, European security and politics, Ukraine war, conflicts in Africa, etc.), shaping the narrative and ensuring the quality of published content on Wyoming Star, providing the readership with essential information to shape their opinion on what is happening. Michelle has also interviewed political experts on the matters unfolding on the US political landscape and those around the world to provide the readership with better understanding of these complex processes.