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OIL AND GAS
Libya pro-government forces shoot down militia chopper
by Staff Writers
Benghazi, Libya (AFP) Dec 30, 2014


Wintershall shuts oil operations in Libya
Tripoli, Libya (UPI) Dec 30, 2014 - With fighting ongoing in and around Libya oil export facilities, German energy company Wintershall said it had to suspend operations until further notice.

"Wintershall traditionally transports oil produced in the Libyan desert to the export facilities in the coastal towns of Ras-Lanuf and Zuetina," the German company said in a Monday statement. "Wintershall does not deliver oil to Es Sider, where export facilities are on fire at this time after intense fighting."

The U.N. Support Mission in Libya during the weekend called on all parties involved in the fighting to work together to end what it said was a cycle of violence spiraling quickly toward war.

Oil storage depots at the Es Sider port caught fire during weekend fighting. Ahmed al-Mismari, a spokesman for the Libyan military, said airstrikes targeted militants with the Libya Dawn brigade.

"This morning, two aircraft carried out an airstrike at Es Sider, but they were repulsed by anti-aircraft fire from the ground," he told the Libya Herald.

The state-run National Oil Corp. confirmed as many as five of the 21 tanks storing oil at the site are in flames, which represents about $100 million worth of crude oil.

Oil export facilities in Libya have been closed due to violence since at least mid-December. Prior to civil war in 2011, Libya was producing around 1 million barrels of oil per day.

For Wintershall, which was only able to get operations going in September, output was around 35,000 bpd.

A Libyan jet shot down a militia helicopter Tuesday after Islamist-led fighters launched air strikes on a key oil terminal in the east of the country, a military spokesman said.

Fighters from the Islamist-led Fajr Libya (Libya Dawn) coalition of militias, which controls much of Tripoli, as well as second and third cities Benghazi and Misrata, have been trying to seize Al-Sidra oil terminal.

Militia aircraft, including the helicopter, attacked pro-government forces deployed in the so-called "oil crescent" eastern region around Al-Sidra, said spokesman Ali al-Hassi.

"The air force shot down the helicopter as it prepared to land at a military base near Sirte airport, after it had taken part with other aircraft in the air raids," Hassi said.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Fajr Libya has been trying to take Al-Sidra and the nearby Ras Lanuf terminal since Thursday, when it killed at least 22 soldiers in a surprise attack by speedboat.

Seven oil tanks at Al-Sidra were set on fire as a result of the fighting. On Sunday, firefighters managed to extinguish the blazes at four of them and put out another fire on Monday.

There are 19 tanks at Al-Sidra, and two of them are still ablaze, raising concern that if the fires are not brought under control they could spread and disrupt Libya's key oil industry.

On Monday, Libya's internationally recognised government approved a $6 million (4.9 million euro) deal with a US firm that will send experts to extinguish the fires, a statement said.

Libya's oil production has dropped to less than 350,000 barrels per day since clashes first erupted around the export terminals on December 13, from 800,000 previously, industry experts say.

The fighting has alarmed investors, who are concerned about possible disruptions.

On Sunday, pro-government forces raided the militia-held city of Misrata, after a Fajr Libya launched a new assault on Al-Sidra.

More than three years after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed revolt, Libya remains awash with weapons and powerful militias, and has rival parliaments and governments.

The internationally recognised parliament and government have taken refuge in the eastern city of Tobruk.

On Tuesday, a car bomb exploded outside parliament's headquarters in Tobruk, injuring some passersby, a spokesman for the legislature said.

Faraj Buhashem said the car exploded near the back gate of Dar al-Salam Hotel, where the parliament has set up its temporary headquarters.

"There was broken glass and some pedestrians were injured," he said, adding that lawmakers had been meeting in a ground floor room and were unhurt.

But another parliamentary source told AFP that lawmaker Mohamed Warfalli was slightly hurt in the face by flying glass.


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OIL AND GAS
IHS: Islamic State financing war campaign with oil
Washington (UPI) Oct 21, 2014
Oil is fueling the war chest for the group calling itself the Islamic State by more than $2 million per day, a study from consultant group IHS said. A report from IHS Energy found IS, known also as the Islamic State in the Levant, is able to finance itself through a black market for oil. "Oil fuels ISIL's war machine, notably including the military vehicles vital to its movements ... read more


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