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

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