Sunday 31 May 2009

Libya hopes Verenex buy will not take long



Libya's plan to buy Verenex Energy Inc should not take long and it is well-placed to finance the deal, the country's most senior energy official said on Thursday.

Libya has said it will exercise its right to pre-empt a friendly C$10-a-share bid for Verenex from China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) . It has yet to make a formal offer.

"Sometimes it's very difficult to give an exact time-frame, but I hope it will not take long," Shokri Ghanem, the chairman of Libya's National Oil Corporation, told Reuters television.

"Libya has quite a good fund," he said. "Most of the funds are invested in cash and cash is the king now, so I don't think we'll have a big problem regarding finance for this deal."

Verenex holds promising oil assets in Libya, home to Africa's largest oil reserves which has attracted a wave of interest from oil companies after the end of international sanctions.

With the assumption of debt, the C$10 a share offer from CNPC is worth C$499 million, the companies said when it was announced on February 26. The stock was unchanged at C$8.95 as of 1827 GMT.

Ghanem has previously stated that Libya would offer the same price as the C$10-a-share agreed by CNPC. He did not specify a purchase price in his comments on Thursday.

He said Libya had chosen to buy Verenex for commercial reasons.

Source: Reuters

Monday 25 May 2009

233 accidents in Libya resulted in 19 deaths















According to the latest figures published by the Interior Ministry in Libya, there were 233 accidents recorded in Libya from 9th to 15th May 2009.

It resulted in 19 deaths and 107 serious injuries. The Interior Ministry’s sources attributed the cause of the accidents to speeding on long and wide roads, the lack of respect for signals and the rules of traffic, and the use of mobile phones and non-use of the safety belt during driving.

Do you believe it? 19 deaths in just, in how many days, 6 or 7 days, well, it’s very hard to imagine. I am gobsmacked to read the article which was published on Oea Newspaper’s website. I seriously do not know where are the Libyans driving to, most properly to the worst destination, I mean death.

I daily either hear or watch more and more of accidents taking place in every corner of Libya, the question is what is happening in there?

Is it the roads? The cars? The drivers? The non-existence traffic laws? Some blame the roads, some blame the cars, more blame the drivers especially the younger ones. I simply do not know who to blame.

Many questions but no answers or rather no solutions

Sunday 24 May 2009

Libya Will Match China National’s Offer for Verenex


Libya will match China National Petroleum Corp.’s C$499 million ($443 million) offer for Verenex Energy Inc., as the North African nation seeks to retain a larger share of its oil wealth.

“The government is now arranging the funds to buy Verenex,” Shokri Ghanem, chairman of Libya’s state-run National Oil Corp., said in a telephone interview today from Tripoli.

Libya, the holder of the continent’s largest oil reserves, wants to increase its share of petroleum revenue as the budget is squeezed by oil’s slump from July’s record. National Oil is a partner of Verenex, a Canadian explorer, and a preemption clause gives Libya first right of refusal on buying the assets.

China National, the nation’s biggest oil company also known as CNPC, agreed in February to purchase Calgary-based Verenex for C$10 a share in cash.

“CNPC’s offer is final,” Ghanem said today. “It cannot increase it because it’s not like an auction; we will match it.”

Verenex, whose shares more than doubled after the company put itself up for sale in November following four straight years of losses, rose 5.6 percent to C$9 as of 10:13 a.m. in Toronto.

Ghanem said in a March 16 interview that Libya wanted to purchase Verenex for “commercial reasons,” and not to limit the access of China National to its national oil reserves. Verenex has assets in Libya that are worth “hundreds of millions” of dollars, he said at the time.

In a statement on March 18, Verenex reiterated that the proposed sale of the company to China National was subject to “certain consents” from Libya’s National Oil.

China National began exploring for oil in Libya in 2005. Verenex had agreed to pay the Chinese company a C$15 million breakup fee if the company scuttled the deal.

Source: bloomberg

Thursday 21 May 2009

NOC signs agreements with the Total, Wintershall and Statoil.












With its new policies towards renegotiating and extending old agreements, Libya’s NOC has always been attempting to increase its shares and implant new terms and conditions which will make it, increase its shares dramatically.

On Thursday 21/05/2009, the National Oil Corporation signed an Exploration and Production Sharing Agreement with French Total and its partners (German Wintershall and Norwegian Statoil) in Tripoli.

The Agreement was signed by Dr.Shokri Mohamed Ghanem, NOC Chairman and Mr. Christophe de Margerie, Chairman and CEO, and chairwoman of Statoil accompanied by Representatives from Wintershall.

The event was also attended by Mr. Ali Saleh NOC's General Manager and NOC management Committee members.

In terms of oil production the new agreement means Total’s shares will be reduced to 27% and the rest belongs to NOC, whereas the old agreement was 50% each.
On the gas side Total’s shares will be 40% then decreases to 30% instead of 50% from the old agreement.

Furthermore, Total has been active in Libya for a long time and Total has a 75% working interest of the Second Party share in each block, with StatoilHydro holding the remaining 25% of Block C17 and Wintershall the remaining 25% of Block C137.
In addition to production from the offshore Al Jurf field in Block C137 and from the Mabruk field in Block C17 in the Sirte Basin, Total operates a number of other exploration licenses in Libya.

On the other hand, Wintershall has had a local exploration and production presence in Libya since 1958. The largest reservoir from which it produces is the As Sarah oil field near the Jakhira oasis in Libya, where it also operates the country’s only facility that conditions associated gas from its fields and transports the resulting products, gas and condensate, for sale on the coast. In addition, Wintershall was awarded in 2006 another exploration area in south-eastern Libya, covering over 11,000 square kilometers.

StatoilHydro on the mean time, operates three exploration licences in Libya totalling over 23,000 square kilometres.

Source: NOC, Sahra Oil Consultancy, Total, Wintershall and Statoil

Wednesday 20 May 2009

Libya sees improving economy driving oil-price rise


















An improving economic outlook is driving the rise in oil prices and the rally is expected to continue, Libya's top oil official said on Tuesday as crude hit a six-month high.

Oil climbed to $60.48 a barrel on Tuesday, the highest since November, tracking gains in equities in the last few months on hopes of economic recovery. The rally has come despite falling oil demand and rising inventories.

"The economic situation is improving; this is improving the prices and we think they are going to improve even more," Shokri Ghanem, chairman of Libya's National Oil Corporation, told Reuters by telephone from Tripoli.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has agreed to lower its output by 4.2 million barrels per day (bpd) since September to prop up oil prices. It meets to set policy on May 28 in Vienna.

So far, comments from OPEC ministers suggest the group is unlikely to reduce supply further. But prices are still lower than the $70-$75 a barrel that OPEC officials say is needed to keep up industry investment.

OPEC needs to improve its compliance with agreed production levels, but it is too early to tell if the group needed to cut supply further at the meeting, Ghanem said.

"All options are open, but still we have to have a better grasp of the market behaviour," he said.

Some estimates of OPEC production, including the group's own monthly report, show it raised oil supply slightly in April, a sign that rising prices could have prompted members to relax adherence to supply curbs.

Source: Reuters

Tuesday 19 May 2009

Libyan PM opens “Libya Build Expo”



Dr. Baghdadi Mahmudi, “the Libyan General Secretaries of the General People's Committee” prime minster opens on Monday 18th May 2009, the Libya Build Expo which is considered as the largest International exhibition held in Libya, specialised in Building and Construction sector. It Exhibits latest technology in building construction including all of its Supporting Industries. Participants will meet with leading private sector experts.

According to Secretaries of the General People's Committee’s website, there are more than 540 local, regional and international companies participating in this event from 33 countries.

The opening was also attended by several Libyan ministers and head of foreign diplomats working in Libya.

The Exhibition is taking place at Tripoli International Fair ans will run from 18th to 21st of May 2009.

Source: Sahra Oil Consultancy & Secretaries of the General People's Committee

Saturday 16 May 2009

Slow progress sows doubts on Libyan oil prospects

* Foreign firms re-assess prospects
* Initial results disappoint
* Libya focuses on renegotiating old contracts


Disappointment at the slow pace of oil finds in post-sanctions Libya is sowing doubt over output targets and leading some foreign oil firms to re-assess their prospects in the country.

Libya was off limits for most foreign oil firms for decades and they accepted some of the industry's tightest exploration and production sharing deals when they were at last able to access Africa's most promising oil acreage.
That puts them under heavy pressure to deliver.

It is still early days for engineers scouring the desert country and its Mediterranean sea bed for oil and gas.

Super-majors such as BP Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp, which nurture the biggest ambitions for Libya, are still at the stage of seismic testing.
BP ended a 30-year absence from Libya in 2007 when it signed its biggest exploration commitment through a bilateral deal. It will spend at least $900 million to search the onshore Ghadames area and offshore Sirte basin with 17 exploration wells.
Yet analysts said they would have expected a higher rate of oil and gas discoveries in Libya so far.

"Overall, initial exploration results have been disappointing compared to the level of expectations only a few years ago," said Craig McMahon of Wood Mackenzie.
Verenex of Canada is the only winner of post-sanctions licences under Libya's EPSA-IV tender mechanism to have made sizeable finds, prompting a battle for ownership of the company between Libya and China National Petroleum Corp.
More recent discoveries by Hess, Repsol and RWE are seen by industry experts as promising.

"But there's no doubt that things are moving more slowly than some of the companies hoped," said Ben Cahill, Petroleum Risk Manager at consultants PFC Energy. "Libya's production targets are in jeopardy and it won't be able to meet them without shifting its emphasis in the next two years."
DELAYS

Libya's government is still aiming for oil production of 3 million barrels a day by 2012, up from 2 million this year, and sees a doubling of gas production by 2012 or 2013 from the current rate of 3.5 billion cubic feet (99.1 million cubic metres) per day.

A rise in the number of foreign firms in Libya has tested the ability of its National Oil Corporation (NOC) to approve contracts and development plans and led to delays, Cahill said.

Many that won acreage in post-sanctions tenders have not yet finalised those deals and NOC has been preoccupied by the renegotiation of older contracts to bring them in line with Libya's new fiscal terms.

Occidental was among the most successful bidders in a 2005 exploration and production licensing round but has ended exploration drilling to focus on existing fields, according to industry experts.

"Right now Libya is what it is," Occidental Chief Executive Ray Irani told analysts in late April. "Things move slower than we expected and studies continue to take place, but I don't expect any meaningful increases there for at least another 12 months."

Occidental reported first-quarter net production from Libya of 8,000 barrels per day, down from 22,000 bpd a year earlier.
That was the same as in the fourth quarter, when company officials talked of a reduction of 12,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in Libya from a year earlier due to new contract terms.

TIGHTER TERMS
Analysts say Libya could further tighten terms for foreign oil firms in the next two years as deals struck in competitive tenders since the end of sanctions come up for renegotiation.

Lower prices have slashed windfall energy income and given ammunition to establishment conservatives who think foreigners exploiting Libya's precious resources are having it too easy.
That could further discourage oil firms disappointed at the rate of new finds and dampen exploration activity.
"Companies exploring under EPSA-IV haven't made the big finds they were hoping for and are thinking of revising their strategy," said Jon Marks, editorial director of industry newsletter Africa Energy.

There is big potential for output increases in the short term as new technology boosts the performance of ageing wells, analysts say.

There are also many near-field areas containing patchworks of smaller reserves that are close to transport infrastructure and could be developed relatively quickly.
Now a global drop in equipment and service costs may spur some licence holders in Libya to move ahead with their work.

"However, whether NOC will be in a position to approve and critically fund these work plans remains to be seen," said McMahon of Wood Mackenzie.

Source: Reuters

Friday 15 May 2009

Norway drops probe into Hydro's Libya dealings

Norwegian economic crime unit Oekokrim has dropped an investigation into suspect consultancy payments made by Norsk Hydro (NHY.OL) in Libya, the Norwegian aluminium producer said on Friday.

The Libya scandal forced Norsk Hydro's former chief executive, Eivind Reiten, to resign from the post of StatoilHydro (STL.OL) chairman in 2007, after Norsk Hydro sold its oil and gas activities to Norwegian energy group Statoil.

"This has been a challenging case both for the company and for the individuals involved, and we are pleased that Oekokrim has arrived at this conclusion," Norsk Hydro Chairman Terje Vareberg said in a statement.

The suspect deals go back to 2000-2001, before Reiten took over as CEO but when he was a member of Hydro's group executive management. The case involves the oil and gas operations that Statoil acquired from Norsk Hydro to create StatoilHydro.

Source: Reuters

the craziest car accident in Libya

This is really the craziest accident I have ever seen in Libya, it shows how driving in Libya is becoming increasingly dangerous.
I do not know what happened to the taxi driver and if he had a passenger sitting next to him. God knows what went wrong and what might happen to him.
I presume he was speeding as Libyans usually do especially younger one. Let’s hope is not in a serious condition

Thursday 14 May 2009

Libya fund eyeing stake in Italy's Enel - WSJ


Libya's sovereign wealth fund may take a stake in Italian power company Enel SpA (ENEI.MI) as part of the utility's planned capital hike, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.

In an interview, Chief Executive Fulvio Conti said the Libyan Investment Authority had expressed interest in taking a minority stake.

The fund could either buy shares in the open market or subscribe to an 8 billion euro ($10.9 billion) capital increase that Enel is planning in order to cut its debt, the newspaper quoted Conti as saying.

"We would welcome their ideas. It is premature to say how much and if and when they would participate," he said.

Hafed Gaddur, Libya's ambassador to Italy, told the newspaper Conti had travelled to Libya a week ago to make a presentation to the head of the fund.

"We are evaluating it. No decision has been made," he was quoted as saying. ($1=.7336 Euro)

Source: MILAN, May 13 (Reuters)

Tuesday 12 May 2009

2009 International Quality Conference kicks off in Tripoli.


The 6th International Quality Conference for 2009 began in Tripoli on Monday under the theme "Quality Basis for the Promotion of Competitiveness".

Expert and specialists from Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria and Emirates in addition to Great Jamahiriya are taking part in the conference.

The conference is being organized by the National Center for Specifications and Standards in collaboration with the GPC for Planning and Finance and the Libyan Quality Association.

For two days, the conference will discuss more than 16 scientific research papers that deals with four main topics, which in general focuses on general concept for building competitiveness, examples for enhancing Libyan institutions' competitiveness, Arab, African and international experience and quality infrastructure and its role in enhancing competiveness.

The conference aims at popularizing competitiveness conception for service and production institutes, benefiting from experiences of other nations in enhancing competitiveness and setting up a national strategy to enhance competitiveness.

Source: Jana

Monday 11 May 2009

Medco seeks $275m in loans to finance oil field in Libya.


Publicly listed PT Medco Energi International is seeking as much as US$275 million worth of loans to develop its oil block in Libya.

Medco project director Lukman Mahfoedz said the so-called Area 47 project in Libya would cost $800 million for facility construction and $300 million for development.

“Of the total cost of US$ 1.1 billion, Medco will only contribute 25 percent,” he said.

Medco president director Darmoyo Doyoatmojo said he was optimistic the company would secure the required loans.

“Once a reserve has been found, the project’s risk will be very small,” he said, adding Medco had talked with several banks about loans.

Area 47 is estimated to have contingent reserves of 307 million barrels of oil. Under the production sharing agreement, Medco and partner Canada-based Verenex jointly own 13.7 percent of the reserve, while Libya’s National Oil Company owns the remaining 86.3 percent once the block starts production.

Verenex is currently trying to sell its stake in the block, with Indonesian state-owned oil and gas company PT Pertamina reportedly looking to acquire the stake.

Darmoyo said Medco expected Area 47 to begin production by the end of 2010, with an average output of 50,000 barrels oil per day (bpd).

“We’ve submitted our appraisal reports on the project’s economic viability to Libya’s National Oil Company, and we expect to receive its approval in the third quarter,” he said.

Medco, controlled by the Panigoro family, recorded $280 million in net profit last year, up from $7 million in 2007.

Source:The jakarta post

Friday 8 May 2009

Verenex investors await Libyan counter bid


Investors in Canada's Verenex Energy Inc. said on Wednesday they saw growing risks of delays in the $C499 million ($425 million) sale of the company to China or Libya.

Libya has said it will exercise its right to pre-empt a friendly C$10-a-share bid for Verenex from China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) but Verenex in its earnings release on Tuesday said Libya had yet to make a formal offer.

Shares of Verenex were trading little changed at C$9.16 on Wednesday, indicating investors still expect a sale to happen. But some are uneasy over the lack of a formal bid from Libya, or word on Libya's consent to China's offer.

"The best thing is either the Libyan government says yes to the Chinese, or the Libyan government agrees to buy it on the same terms," a Verenex shareholder who declined to be identified said on Wednesday.

"But we have to be prepared for a situation where the downside occurs and Verenex goes back to a much lower price if it doesn't happen.

Source: Reuters

Sunday 3 May 2009

A new 360 degree pictures from Tripoli, Libya


Outside the Main Gates in Libya

This is new and very interesting to see actually, I have to say when I saw it, I thought this is great. It’s amazing to see it happening in Tripoli, I liked the idea so much and hope to see it expanding through the whole city not only few places and even to other cities in Libya. There are at the moment 5 photos and hopefully we will see more.

It gives viewers who have never been to Libya some sort of image or a better picture which they can relate to when they travel to the country.

You can simply click and drag the picture to look around in 360 degree!