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Total to sink $16 billion in Angolan oil
by Daniel J. Graeber
Paris (UPI) Apr 14, 2013


More Libyan oil expected on global market
Tripoli, Libya (UPI) Apr 14, 2013 - Libya's state-owned oil company said operations resumed at the western Zawiya oil terminal after protesters ended a blockade.

More Libyan crude oil is expected to arrive on the international market after the central government brokered a deal with eastern rebel leaders to open export terminals there last week.

Libya has struggled to return to its pre-civil war production level of 1.6 million barrels per day. Market tensions over energy security in Eastern Europe were countered by prospects even more Libyan oil would come from the Zawiya oil port in the west of the country.

The International Monetary Fund said the Libyan energy sector represents about $63 billion to the government, a majority in terms of percentage of gross domestic product. In March, a progress report on Libya from the European Commission said a blockade on oil exports by eastern federalists has "severely" affected Libya's fiscal situation.

[BBC]

French energy company Total said Monday it made a final investment decision to develop the deep water Kaombo project off the coast of Angola.

Total said it opted to reduce the cost of the deep water prospect by $4 billion to $16 billion and operations should start in 2017. The field, which has an estimated 650 million barrels of reserves, should produce 230,000 barrels of oil per day for Angola once operations begin.

Yves-Louis Darricarrere, president of upstream operations for Total, said the streamlined investment shows that Angola remains a core part of the company's portfolio.

"Kaombo illustrates both the group's capital discipline and objective to reduce capital expenditures," he said in a statement.

The development covers an area of 300 square miles off the Angolan coast, where water depths range from 4,500 feet to 6,200 feet deep.

Angola is a member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. It has 9 billion barrels of proven crude oil reserves and produces on average 1.7 million bpd.

Total said its share of production from Angola made it the country's leading oil operator in 2013.

[Total]

[OPEC]

.


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