UPDATE 2-Rebels say Qatar ready to market east Libyan oil
Sun Mar 27, 2011 4:14pm GMT
 
* Rebel official sees oil shipments within a week

* Says rebel-held eastern Libya has no money problems

* Sees Brega terminal operating again for domestic supply

(Adds detail)

By Alexander Dziadosz

BENGHAZI, Libya, March 27 (Reuters) - A senior Libyan rebel official said on 
Sunday Gulf oil producer Qatar had agreed to market crude oil produced from 
east Libyan fields which are no longer in the control of Muammar Gaddafi.

"We contacted the oil company of Qatar and thankfully they agreed to take all 
the oil that we wish to export and market this oil for us," said Ali Tarhouni, 
a rebel official in charge of economic, financial and oil matters.

"Our next shipment will be in less than a week," Tarhouni told reporters in the 
rebel-held eastern city of Benghazi.

State-owned Qatar Petroleum said it had no comment.

Small, energy-rich Qatar became the first Arab nation to begin patrolling a 
U.N. backed no-fly zone on Friday and has urged Gaddafi to quit to avoid more 
bloodshed.

Libya produced about 1.6 million barrels of oil per day before the crisis, or 
almost 2 percent of world output. Most of the oil is in the east but sanctions 
and the lack of a marketing operation have stopped the rebels selling it abroad.

The north African country relies heavily on oil exports, which pay the state 
salaries on which most families depend.

Tarhouni said output from east Libya oil fields that rebels controlled was 
running at about 100,000 to 130,000 barrels per day (bpd), which could be 
increased to 300,000 bpd.

Rebel fighters pushed west towards Gaddafi's stronghold of Sirte on Sunday 
after routing his forces in the town of Ajdabiyah with the aid of Western air 
strikes.

The advance puts the rebels back in control of all the main oil terminals in 
the eastern half of Libya, namely Es Sider, Ras Lanuf, Brega, Zueitina and 
Tobruk.

Tarhouni said he had asked the main oil company at Brega, 75 km west of 
Ajdabiyah, to resume operations within 24 hours. The terminal would produce 
liquid natural gas for domestic use for now, he said.

OIL STOCKS BUILD IN TOBRUK

Officials at eastern oil company AGOCO have told Reuters that most of the oil 
produced in the east is piped to the terminal in Tobruk in the far east of 
Libya.

Output at its fields, including Nafoora, Sarir and Misla in the Sirte Basin, 
fell in recent weeks as an absence of shipments since early March led to a 
build-up of stocks at Tobruk.

Tarhouni, a U.S. based academic and exile opposition figure, was designated 
last week by the Benghazi-based national council to steer its financial and oil 
policy.

He said the rebel leadership had set up an escrow account monitored by auditors 
that would be used to receive revenues from oil sales.

The rebels also plan to take out loans backed by Libya's sovereign wealth fund, 
he said.

"We would keep the fund frozen until the entire country is liberated," said 
Tarhouni. "Instead, what we will do is take loans backed by the sovereign fund."

He said he saw no serious liquidity problems for the rebels, who were well 
placed in terms of foreign currency reserves. (Writing by Edmund Blair and Tom 
Pfeiffer in Cairo; Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton and David Holmes)

© Thomson Reuters 2011 All rights reserved




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