Libya’s crude floods market again as OPEC fights to restrict flows

Libya crude floods market again as OPEC fights to restrict flows copy

Bloomberg

Libya’s crude shipments jumped to a new three-year high last month, dealing a fresh blow to OPEC and allied oil-producing nations as they battle to restrict a global supply surplus that’s depressing prices for the commodity.
The North African nation shipped about 865,000 barrels a day of crude in July, tanker tracking data compiled by Bloomberg show. That was a gain of 11 percent from June, which was already the highest since at least July 2014.
The pace at which Libya can revive crude sales is critical for the oil market because, along with Nigeria, the nation wasn’t bound by Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries supply restrictions that helped limit supply this year. Domestic conflicts mean the two nations can pump at will while other producer states are depriving themselves of export revenues. Nigeria is also boosting output as a militant campaign is quelled.
Libya’s revival “hurts OPEC’s efforts to re-balance the oil market,” said Carsten Fritsch, an analyst at Commerzbank
AG. It comes at a time when other countries that agreed to curb production are starting to comply less strictly with the
accord, he said.
The total output from OPEC members in July rose 210,000 barrels a day from June to reach 32.87 million barrels a day, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Libya led the gains.

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