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Political chaos in Libya worsening a global oil supply crisis

Caroline Alexander, Grant Smith and Salma El Wardany July 13, 2022

(Bloomberg) 鈥 As U.S. President Joe Biden prepares to visit the Persian Gulf to get more oil onto global markets, political turmoil in another part of OPEC threatens to further undermine the cartel鈥檚 production.

Libya鈥檚 output has collapsed since mid-April after protesters forced the closure of several oil fields and ports. A tussle between rival administrations for control of the country shows no sign of ending and demonstrations over fuel and power shortages are spreading. Production will probably drop even more without a resolution.

鈥淲e lost half of Libya鈥檚 supply, and the other half is at high odds of going off in the coming weeks,鈥 said Bob McNally, president of Washington-based consultant Rapidan Energy Group and a former White House official.

The crisis comes just as oil importers call out for聽. Crude prices surged above $100 a barrel after Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine and the West鈥檚 imposition of sanctions on Moscow, which pose the biggest disruption to the market in decades.

Oil prices have fallen in the past month amid fears of聽聽in major economies. But they鈥檙e still up almost 30% this year, with elevated fuel costs leading to higher inflation and exacerbating a cost-of-living squeeze.

Biden will try to persuade Gulf states to pump more oil when he聽聽on Friday. He also said he鈥檒l address Libya鈥檚 鈥減olitical gridlock.鈥

Libya鈥檚 conflict 鈥渉as reached high levels of complexity,鈥 said Illiasse Sdiqui, an associate director at risk-management company Whispering Bell. 鈥淚n all scenarios, the outlook for the oil sector will remain sporadic and sustained production levels are unlikely.鈥

Exports from the country, home to Africa鈥檚 largest oil reserves, declined to a 20-month low of 610,000 barrels a day in June, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The state-run National Oil Corp. suspended聽聽from the key ports of Es Sider and Ras Lanuf two weeks ago. The nearby terminals of Brega and Zueitina haven鈥檛 handled any crude for almost two months, though the NOC lifted force majeure -- a legal clause allowing it to halt exports -- this week.

The nation has been mired in strife since the fall of dictator Moammar Al Qaddafi in 2011, with its oil deposits routinely exploited for leverage by warring parties.

There鈥檚 been a peace of sorts since a ceasefire in mid-2020, but it鈥檚 looking increasingly fragile after presidential polls scheduled for December were postponed.

Now, there鈥檚 a standoff between two governments. Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah鈥檚 administration in Tripoli, the capital, is backed by Turkey. It鈥檚 opposed by Fathi Bashagha, who鈥檚 based in Sirte and also claims the premiership. He鈥檚 allied with Khalifa Haftar, an eastern general who controls many of Libya鈥檚 oil fields and has previously been supported by Russia and the UAE.

鈥楥haos Will Continue鈥

The two sides have held talks in Cairo and Geneva, though they鈥檝e failed to break the impasse.

Bashagha told Bloomberg in an聽聽last month there鈥檚 little chance of elections happening this year. 鈥淐haos will continue,鈥 he said.

His forces tried to enter Tripoli in May but had to withdraw quickly.

鈥淣either government is easy to remove -- not least because both are backed by armed militias,鈥 said Alice Gower, director of geopolitics and security at Middle East-focused consultancy Azure Strategy. 鈥淏ashagha will soon have to choose between attempting to broaden his coalition or trying again to enter Tripoli. A second attempt would likely meet a similar fate.鈥

A power struggle over the NOC is adding to the instability in its energy sector. Dbeibah鈥檚 government this week said the oil firm鈥檚 board must be dissolved and its long-standing chairman, Mustafa Sanalla, should聽, according to several people familiar with the matter. Farhat Omar Bengdara, a former central bank governor, has been appointed as the new chairman, the people said.

It鈥檚 unclear if the NOC and Sanalla will accept the decision.

Meanwhile, Libyans are getting more and more desperate.聽

鈥淢edical services are poor, roads are dilapidated,鈥 said Suleiman Howeij, a 54-year-old father of nine leading a sit-in at an oil site. 鈥淲e do not benefit from oil revenues. Whether the price of crude increases or decreases in the world market, we can hardly afford the price of bread.鈥

Demonstrations have spread beyond oil installations, with Libyans taking to the streets in several cities. In Tobruk in the east, the parliament building was set alight.

鈥淲e just want electricity, food and no fighting鈥 said Mohamed Abdel-Meguid, a student in Benghazi, the second-biggest city. 鈥淚鈥檓 starting to think it鈥檚 a curse and we鈥檙e going to remain like this forever in Libya.鈥

International powers will have to step in for there to be a solution, according to聽, a senior fellow at the European Council of Foreign Relations.

鈥淎s the increasingly powerful force of public anger collides with the seemingly immovable greed of Libyan elites, it is clear that any solution will require some international support,鈥 he said. 鈥淯nless things change, the situation will only get worse.鈥

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