1. Lebanon’s ‘Revolution’ Upends Status Quo

    ...rved as a strong impetus for the protests. Beyond the tax announcement and the fires, the Lebanese had a long list of outstanding grievances against the ruling oligarchy: the country’s economy has grown at a measly 1.3% per annum since 2011 (see chart); state power operator Electricité du Liban (Ed...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 43
    Published at Fri, 25 Oct 2019
  2. Libya: Waha Expansion Inches Forward

    ...Projects to boost Libya’s long-term output have mostly been on hold since before the 2011 revolution. But plans by the Waha Oil Company (WOC) – grouping NOC (59.18%) with US firms ConocoPhillips (16.33%), Marathon (16.33%) and Hess (8.16%) – to boost capacity from its key Sirte Basin acreage be...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 43
    Published at Fri, 25 Oct 2019
  3. Pakistan’s Oil & Gas Imports: Gulf Dependence Intensifies

    ...mand however (MEES, 22 February). IRAN ANOMALIES       Officially Pakistan’s imports from Iran for both crude and key refined products have been zero since 2011-12. But a more detailed look at the customs stats throws up some anomalies. Pakistan imported 153,600 tons of ‘white spirit’ (customs co...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 42
    Published at Fri, 18 Oct 2019
  4. Tunisia Elects New President

    ...Saied appears to have ridden a wave of disillusionment with established political figures who have been unable to deliver the expected economic fruits of the 2011 Jasmine Revolution. He wants to bring about a form of direct democracy whereby elected local officials would choose regional assemblies wh...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 42
    Published at Fri, 18 Oct 2019
  5. NOC Eyes Russian Firms’ Return

    ...NOC sees its longer term output gains coming from new developments. But for this, it needs to persuade firms that have not been active in Libya since the 2011 war to return. On 5 October NOC all but announced Russia’s Tatneft had returned to Libya, welcoming “progress of seismic surveys be...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 41
    Published at Fri, 11 Oct 2019
  6. Egypt, Ethiopia Hit Dam Deadlock

    ...Tripartite talks between Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan in Khartoum about filling of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) broke down last week with Cairo calling for international mediation. Announced in 2011 the $5bn, 6GW Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) has suffered several de...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 41
    Published at Fri, 11 Oct 2019
  7. Libya’s NOC Demands Funds

    ...derinvestment has taken its toll on the country’s lifeline oil sector. With foreign investors wary, NOC desperately needs cash to maintain its aging and dilapidated energy infrastructure. It also wants to kick-start work on several projects abandoned following the 2011 revolution (MEES, 31 May and MEES, 20 Se...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019
  8. Taqa Issues $500mn In Bonds

    ...ginning in 2013 forced a strategic rethink. The company’s assets are mainly in upstream oil and gas and power. In 2018 Taqa’s power and desalination plants contributed 53% of its income and upstream operations 31%. This marked a major turnaround from 2011, when Taqa’s upstream provided 45% of its income an...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019
  9. Mena Petchems Firms See PDH Process As Key To Exploiting Propane Resources

    ...ypt 2011 *480 EPPC n/a EGPC 0.8 400 PP Ruwais, UA...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019
  10. Japan: UAE Overtakes Saudi As Number One Supplier

    ...*For well over a decade Saudi Arabia had been the unrivalled number one crude and condensate supplier to Japan. Saudi market share climbed above 30% in 2011 and rose steadily to hit 40% in 2017, dipping only modestly to 38.1% for 2018. The UAE (almost all Abu Dhabi) was a distant number two fo...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019
  11. Opec Output Slumps As Ecuador Quits

    ...oduction in late 2018 (MEES, 7 December 2018). Libyan output too has risen by 170,000 b/d, but the country is one of two members exempt from production restrictions as it seeks to return a semblance of stability to the country following the 2011 revolution and subsequent civil war. Output jumped 70...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019
  12. Eni, Shell & OMV In Tunisia: Will They Stay Or Will They Go?

    ...llowing the 2011 revolution and brought online production from scratch. MAZARINE: SMALL FIRM, BIG PLANS Mazarine started its Tunisian operations (at the time its sole focus) in 2013, acquiring a 45% stake in the Zaafrane exploration permit in the southwest of the country. It struck oil there in 20...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019
  13. Tunisia’s Upstream: Can It Emerge From A Lost Decade?

    ...Tunisia’s oil and gas output has been on a downward trajectory for almost a decade. Political instability unleashed following the 2011 revolution paralyzed the country’s upstream. But Industry Minister Slim Feriani has been battling to turn things around and is determined to see “the glass ha...

    Volume: 62
    Issue: 40
    Published at Fri, 04 Oct 2019