Sunday 31 January 2010

Libya approves free trade zone approved


Libya's main legislative body has approved a law setting up a free trade zone on the country's Mediterranean coast, Saadi Gaddafi, a son of the Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, told Reuters on Sunday.

The zone will have free movement of capital and goods, its own courts and a stock exchange, and investors there will benefit from a 10-year tax holiday, according to a copy of the law seen by Reuters.

The idea of the free trade zone has been in development for several years, and a Dubai-based property developer had said it plans to be involved, but progress has been slow.

Saadi Gaddafi, a businessman who is likely to be director of the zone's board, said the zone was needed to stimulate investment outside Libya's oil and gas sector.
"Although Libya has other sources, we still depend primarily on oil," he told Reuters in an interview. "We have to take care of industry, foreign investment, tourism and we also have to search for other sources ... anything that makes Libya depend on sources other than oil."

He said the law on the zone had been approved by his father, was backed by his brother Saif al-Islam, who is Libya's second most powerful political figure, and had also been approved by the Basic People's Congresses, Libya's main law-making body.
Under Libya's grass-roots system of government, decisions taken by the Basic People's Congresses are automatically passed into law by the General People's Congress, or parliament.

Saadi called all Libyans and Libyan businessmen who are experts to take advantage of these benefits and the new business potential and participate and contribute to the success of the programmes and projects and work together for a better future for Libya.
The main objective of establishing such a free zone for investment with its natural environment in the development of investment solutions to be able to compete with similar economic regions in the world and to be a magnet for national and foreign investments and developments as a new management model governs the legal relations between the state authorities and the region and investors by the latest world standards of excellence in the administrative, technical, productive, professional and human

Source: Reuters and SOC Libya

Thursday 28 January 2010

A new video about Libya

A new video about Libya which I made and I hope you will enjoy it as much as my other videos. The photos are all mine so you will mainly find photos from Tripoli (my home town) and Sabratha (an ancient Roman city)

The song is called Al Shamas (The Sun) and performed by the Libyan singer Ahmed Fakroun.



العراق, الكويت , ليبيا , لبنان , مصر, موريتانيا , المغرب , قطر سورية, السودان , عمان , تونس, الأردن ,السعودية , فلسطين الإمارات , الجزائر ,
اليمن , البحرين احمد فكرون، الفنان الليبي ، المغني الليبي، Libya, Benghazi, Tripoli, ليبيا, طرابلس, بنغازي , Libyan music, ليبية
Ahmed Fakroun , Libyan singer, Libyan songs, Algeria , Yemen , Bahrain , Palestine, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Lebanon, Morocco, Egypt , Mauritania, Qatar, Syria, Sudan, Oman, Tunisia ,Saudi Arabia, Jordan , UAE, USA ,UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain

NEW OIL DISCOVERY BY TATNEFT



NOC announces Wednesday 28/1/2010 that TATNEFT being partners in an Exploration and Sharing agreement, report initial information concerning the exploration well B1-82/04 New Field Wildcat in Ghadamis Basin.

The well is located approximately 345 km South of Tripoli. The well B1-82/04, drilled in Ghadamis Basin area 82 to a total depth 8,750 feet, encountered hydrocarbons in Ouen Kasa with a net pay 11 feet. The initial production testing from Ouen Kasa established an Oil Rate of 829 bbls/d , Choke Size 32/64 (Inch), Oil Gravity 37.31 API This well represents the second discovery in area 82, which was awarded by NOC in December 2005.

TATNEFT drilled the well as an operator under an EPSA agreement with NOC with interest distributed as Follows: First Party Interest (NOC Libya) 89.5 %. Second Party Interest (TATNEFT) 10.5 % (Operator)

LIBYA: ITALIAN BUSINESSES OPTIMISTIC, CLIMATE HAS CHANGED




ROME - Seven days to prepare what perhaps was the most important mission of Italian entrepreneurs and investors to Libya: one week was the amount of time that elapsed between the official communication of the mission and the delegation's departure, after the government in Tripoli asked the Italian Foreign Ministry and Assafrica & Mediterranean (the operative branch of the Confindustria in the region) to organise a visit on January 23 of top-level business representatives from the country, ranging from giants in the infrastructure sector to small and medium enterprises. Relations between Italy and Libya, reports Assafrica, have never been so positive economically and even the issues of the credit owed to 110 Italian companies seems to have been resolved, even if the distance between what is being offered by Tripoli (450 milion euros) and the money owed to Italian businesses (650 million euros) appears far apart; a gap can be closed because now the difference is the Italian government's ''problem''.

The mission did confirm that the Libyan market is not at all impermeable for Italian companies, which are actually welcomed, and downright needed. This approval seems to mainly be focussed on SMEs, which Tripoli has pinpointed to create joint companies in key areas in the food and agriculture, tourism and training sectors.

In the food and agriculture industry Italian businesses are needed in the processing and conservation sector (the Libyan Sea is among the most abundant in fish); in tourism there is a double need for Libya: increased tourism flow from Italy and to begin investment programmes from Italian players in the industry; in the training sector Libya needs to make use of an excellent school system, which now needs to be capitalised on to prepare a new generation in the technical and management sector.

Italian companies will find a highly receptive situation ''with a climate that appears to have certainly improved since I started to go to Libya in 1998,'' said Pier Luigi D'Agata, the director general of Assafrica & Mediterraneo, who led the delegation together with the president of the Italian-Libyan joint Chamber of Commerce, Antonio De Capoa. A climate that is different and better, which D'Agata translated with one phrase: ''you can detect a new willingness'', which can be seen in the receptiveness shown by Prime Minister Baghdadi al Mahmudi, who said that he will work to eliminate obstacles when he heard about the difficulties of Italian businesspeople obtaining visas, speculating that they could be granted in the airport. All this while Libya is cracking down on visas requested by European citizens.

Source: (ANSAmed).

Friday 22 January 2010

Libya discovered seven new oil deposits in 2009






The Libyan National Oil company (NOC) announced on Thursday that seven new oil and gas deposits were discovered in 2009 in the country.

The report on activities in the oil sector released on the internet site of NOC, stressed that the oil companies which discovered those deposits were, the Austrian company, Woodside, which discovered an oil deposit in the basin of Ghadams, about 900 km South of Tripoli and the Canadian company, Verenex which discovered a gas deposit in Ghadams.

The Algerian company, Sonatrac also announced discovery of oil deposits in the basin of Ghadams, 230 km south of Tripoli, while the Spanish company, Repsol discovered on-shore oil reserves from 40 km south-west of Benghazi, 1,050 km east of Tripoli.

Similarly, the Libyan company, Golf Arabic Petroleum, discovered oil deposit at 190 km south of Tripoli in the basin of Ghadams and the Russian company, Tatnafet discovered an oil deposit in the basin of Ghadams, 345 km south of Tripoli.

The US company, Hess, also discovered onshore oil and gas in the deep seas of the Mediterranean, 56 km north of the Libyan coasts on the Gulf of Sirte central Libya.

The NOC paper also stressed the profits in terms of technology transfer made in favour of Libya by international companies which transferred their engineering works and services to the country, which enabled the NOC to promote the competences of the local staff and to develop training in that domain.

However, the secretary of NOC managing committee, Dr Shoukri Ghanem, announced recently that Libya recorded huge revenues thanks to the revision of canvassing and sharing agreements on oil production which are estimated at US$10 billion.

He also said that his country did not intend to invite companies to tender for new blocks in 2010 because of the collapse in the gross prices and the increase in invitations to tender on the global market.

Sources say that Libya, which is the third African oil producer, after Nigeria and Angola, with reserves estimated to date at 41.5 billion barrels, intends to increase its reserves to 6.5 billion barrels in 2010, with a planned production of 2.9 million barrels per day in 2015.

Tripoli - Pana

Tuesday 19 January 2010

Brighton architects get recession relief from Libya






Brighton and Hove’s architecture firms have received an unusual helping hand through the recession – from Libya.

Construction projects in the oil-rich North African state have boomed since the end of UN sanctions in 2003 and designers from the city have emerged as the favoured choice.

They have been commissioned for a string of major developments, including mosques, schools and hotels, which have kept jobs secure in Brighton and Hove as the UK economy collapsed.
The unlikely link was originally forged by LCE Architects, based in Western Road, Brighton, the firm behind Brighton’s Jubilee Library.

It has since spread to involve Camillin Denny, based in New England Street, and DRP Architects, the firm behind the refurbishment of the Birdcage Bandstand.

Nick Lomax, LCE’s managing director, said: “It started in 2002, when we had a Britishtrained Libyan architect working for us who suggested we should look into possibilities there, so we did.”

Since then growth in Libya has been rapid, with the state now able to utilise the wealth from its oil and gas resources.

In the past eight years Mr Lomax’s 55-strong practice has designed a series of buildings in Libya, including a central mosque, ten faculty buildings for the Al Fateh University in the capital Tripoli and the prototype for new schools to be built across the country.

Mr Lomax said: “There are fantastic opportunities there, some exciting work, and it has been good for our practice. We couldn’t have predicted the credit crunch would happen but now it seems it was a very good decision.”

Camillin Denny, which has recently unveiled plans for a redevelopment of Medina House on Hove seafront, has worked on a series of Libyan projects since 2006.

They include a new heritage museum and university buildings in Tripoli as well as master plans for town redevelopments and a beach resort on the Mediterranean.

Director Mark Camillin said: “It has helped us to survive the downturn. We employ 40 architects in Brighton and we’ve managed to keep going because of the work there.

“There is a strong tie between Brighton and Libya. A lot of Libyans come here to learn English and have a lasting like of the city.”

He added that while the economies of Abu Dhabi and Dubai had faltered, slowing the number of projects taking place there, Libya remained financially strong.


Source: The Argus. theargus.co.uk

Sunday 10 January 2010

Noras by Ahmed Fakroun

A new song by the great Ahmed Fakroun.



ahmed fakroun, Libya, Libyan singer, Libyan songs, tripoli, احمد فكرون، المغني الليبي، اغاني ليبية، غناء ليبي