Oil Prices Fall As Libya Wins Back Export Terminals

International Business Times

Published Jul 03, 2014 10:22AM ET

Oil Prices Fall As Libya Wins Back Export Terminals

By Maria Gallucci - Libya’s last two oil export terminals to be freed from rebel occupation could start shipping crude again within a week, officials said.

Rebel leaders agreed to hand over the Es Sider and Ras Lanuf export terminals on Wednesday after reaching a deal with the government. The exchange puts to rest a years-long oil export blockade that crippled Libya’s petroleum industry and reduced exports to just 320,000 barrels a day.

Libya’s National Oil Co. said it may formally lift a ban on exports from the eastern oil terminals as early as later Thursday, the Wall Street Journal reported. The restarting of the two facilities, which have a combined capacity of 560,000 barrels a day, would quintuple the country’s current crude-export capacity.

"I officially declare this is the end of the oil crisis," Libya’s acting Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni said, Reuters reported.              

The prospect of higher Libyan output sent global oil prices falling on Wednesday. The U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate for August declined by 86 cents, or 0.8 percent to close at $104.91 a barrel on the New York Mercantile exchange. London’s Brent North Sea crude index for delivery in August fell by $1.05, or 0.9 percent to $111.24 a barrel, its lowest price since June 11, Agence France-Presse reported.