Libya's state-run National Oil Corp (NOC) said that export activity was running normally after it held talks with protesters at the Es Sider and Ras Lanuf ports on Tuesday.
Libya resumed loading oil from two key eastern ports — which account for a third of its exports — after they were halted for a day by protesters.
Oil prices edged higher but remained near a two-week low on Tuesday, as weak economic data from China and rising temperatures elsewhere dampened demand prospects. Supporting prices was a disruption of oil loading operations in Libya.
Libya is turning to renewable energy sources as it faces electricity demand surpassing the capacity of its oil and gas-powered plants
Oil loadings from two key Libyan ports are being brought to a standstill as protests hinder about a third of the OPEC member’s crude exports, a reminder of global supply risks from ongoing tensions in the North African country.
Libya resumed loading oil from two eastern ports that account for a third of its exports after they were halted for a day by protesters.
Hanaa, a Sudanese woman who works gathering plastic bottles from bins to feed her children, says she was abducted in western Libya and taken to a forest and raped at gunpoint by a group of men. The next day her attackers took her to a facility run by the state-funded Stability Support Authority (SSA). Nobody told Hanaa why she had been detained.
I am encouraging Turkish company to come to Libya. There are opportunities, and we welcome to host all these companies,' head of Renewable Energy Authority of Libya tells Anadolu - Anadolu Ajansı
Saudi Arabia's energy minister met his counterparts from the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Iraq and Libya on Monday following U.S. President Donald Trump's call for lower oil prices and ahead of a meeting next week of OPEC+ oil-producing countries.
Libya deported more than 600 men from Niger last month as North African countries — financed by the European Union to tackle migration — have ramped up expulsions of sub-Saharan Africans.
Libya, a country rich in oil reserves, is now focusing on renewable energy to meet its growing electricity demand. With a population of approximately 7 million people, the country’s current electricity supply from oil and gas-powered plants has become insufficient to keep up with rising demand.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported on Monday that Libyan authorities have used a 'litany of overbroad and draconian legacy laws' to suppress civil rights activists and organizations. The group said