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Crude oil climbs as unrest in Libya widens

Sunday, 14 August 2011, 11:38 | Business News | 0 Comment | 9 Views
by contributor

With signs of disarray in Libya’s military and protesters thronging the streets of its biggest cities, anxiety about the security of Libya’s approximately 1.2 million barrels a day of oil exports drove up crude oil prices on world markets.

Oil analysts said Monday that as much as half of those exports could be blocked if coastal ports were closed. A significant portion of the country’s exports come from the eastern side of the Gulf of Sidra, near the most severe of the protests against longtime Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi. The satellite television channel al-Jazeera had reported that Libya’s Nafoora oil field had stopped producing because of an employee strike.

In a speech on state television Sunday night, Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi warned protesters that they risked igniting a civil war in which Libya’s oil wealth “will be burned.”

Brent crude – one of the world’s benchmarks for petroleum prices – rose 3.1 percent to $ 105.70 a barrel in London on Monday, the highest level in more than two years. The price of West Texas Intermediate, another benchmark, jumped 6.2 percent to $ 95.30 a barrel on New York exchanges.

Although the United States imports little oil directly from Libya, the prolonged loss of nearly 2 percent of the world’s output would drive up global prices and add to the already steep prices motorists are paying here. AAA said Sunday that the nationwide price of regular gasoline hit a 28-month high of $ 3.16 a gallon Friday, up 55 cents from a year ago.

Companies operating in Libya said they were evacuating employees’ families and monitoring the situation, though they said production had not been curtailed. Shell said its Tripoli office was closed. “The safety and security of our staff remain our priority,” said a Shell spokeswoman.

Italian oil giant ENI, the largest oil producer in Libya, said that its operations had not been affected but that it had removed 100 people from the country, including nonessential employees and expatriates’ families. ENI’s share price dropped 5 percent Monday.

ENI, which has operated in Libya since the 1950s, produces 550,000 barrels a day in the country, of which ENI owns 270,000 barrels a day; its partners own the rest. It owns half of a pipeline that takes natural gas to Italy.

Libya has been a steady oil exporter for years. (It also consumes 280,000 barrels a day.) Its primary export markets are Italy, Germany, China, France and Spain.

Its high-quality crude oil, known as light, sweet oil, is the type most easily converted into gasoline and diesel fuel, and therefore the type most highly valued on world markets, said Edward Morse, chief energy economist at Credit Suisse. Morse said the approach of spring, traditionally a time of low oil demand, “should ease market fundamentals but doesn’t mean it will.”

Officials from more than 90 nations, including Saudi Arabia’s oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, and U.S. Deputy Secretary of Energy Daniel B. Poneman, were to meet in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday to discuss curbing oil-price fluctuations.


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Thanks to WashingtonPost

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