Libya’s National Oil Company and Central Bank chairmen over the weekend engaged in another round of blitz meetings with oil majors in London in a renewed effort to stop its rival wooing its clients.

The head of the Tripoli-based NOC, Mustafa Sanallah, said that he and Tripoli-based Central Bank chairman Saddek El-Kaber held meetings with 26 oil firms over the course of three days in London, including Britain’s BP and US major ExxonMobil, as well as OMV, Motor Oil Hellas, Hellenic Petroleum and Vitol.

“We got the response from the oil sector that they are committed to all contractual terms” with us, Sanallah said. Rival NOC and central bank leaders appointed by internationally-recognised premier Abdullah al-Thinni, seeking to gain control over Libya’s oil sales, hope to discuss contracts with oil majors at a conference in Dubai next month.

“We don’t expect our partners will go there,” said Sanallah. “They are committed to working with the NOC” in Tripoli. The internationally-recognised eastern government said in March it wanted oil buyers to pay through a new Dubai-based bank account, replacing a decades-old payment system via NOC Tripoli. Oil customers have thus far eschewed such discussions due to legal concerns.

We got the response from the oil sector that they are committed

Libya, which relies on oil revenue for nearly all of its income, has been battered by the oil price drop of around 60 per cent over the past year, coupled with production losses from fighting and protests from various local factions since a group called Libya Dawn seized control of the capital last year.

The fighting has depleted oil revenue to just over $5 billion in the first six months of the year, compared with some $50 billion in total during peak production and higher oil prices in 2012. Current production of 360,000 barrels per day (bpd) is less than a quarter of the peak.

This has also raised questions about the solvency of the central bank and its access to foreign currency.

Sanallah said the NOC is working to switch the country’s power grid in the coming months from gasoil, which it is currently forced to import, to natural gas it produces itself.

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