(Reuters) - A
fire raging for almost a week at Libya's biggest oil port of Es Sider
has destroyed up to 1.8 million barrels of crude and damaged seven
storage tanks, causing total damage of $213 million, a top oil official
said on Tuesday. The Es Sider terminal
and nearby Ras Lanuf stopped working three weeks ago when forces loyal
to a rival government in Tripoli tried seizing them from forces allied
to the recognized Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni. The
terminals are still under control of Thinni's forces but the area has
become a battlefield against former rebels who helped oust Muammar
Gaddafi in 2011 but now fight for control of the North African country. A huge fire at a tank farm outside the terminal was reported on Thursday after a rocket hit, with both sides blaming the other. Thinni's
top oil official, al-Mabrook al-Buseif, told Reuters the fire had
damaged seven tanks and destroyed up to 1.8 million barrels of crude -
roughly four times Libya's daily production. Two
tanks have collapsed and two others are still on fire, said Mohamed El
Harari, a spokesman for state National Oil Corp (NOC). Two tank fires
had been extinguished. Thinni has been forced to work out of the east since a rival group called Libya Dawn seized Tripoli in August, setting up its own government and parliament that is not recognized by world powers. Es Sider is fed from fields run by Waha Oil Co, a joint-venture between Libya's National Oil Corp with U.S. companies Hess (HES.N), Marathon (MRO.N) and ConocoPhillips (COP.N). Without
the two ports, which accounted for around 300,000 bpd of exports,
Libya's total output was in the range of the 380,000 bpd reported on
Sunday, Harari said. The
ports of Zawiya and Mellitah in the west of the country have also halted
oil exports as the conflict has shut down the connecting fields of El
Sharara and El Feel. Only
the ports of Hariga and Brega in the east and two offshore fields are
still working but part of the output is needed to feed the 120,000 bpd
Zawiya and 20,000 bpd Tobruk refineries.
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