Death eases fears of oil disruption

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The death of Libyan dictator Muammer Gaddafi eases the specter of a fully fledged insurgency that could disrupt oil production for years to come, energy analysts said Thursday. Experts said news of Gaddafis death would have little immediate impact on the price of oil, but removed a threat that had been hanging over future prices. It actually means little for todays oil price, but it does remove one of a series of risk factors to a sustained ramp-up in Libyan production, said JPMorgan analyst Lawrence Eagles. With one eye on the chaos that plagued post-war Iraq, many in the market had feared that the collapse of Gaddafis iron rule would result in a long-running conflict that froze Libyan oil production. The economic damage from multiple chronic security issues in major producers has dogged the oil market in the past, Eagles explained. Production in Iraq in the aftermath of the second war, in Nigeria and in Colombia, among others, have all been disrupted by rebel activity, so the removal of a protagonist provides a significant boost to security. Before the revolution began in February this year Libya produced around 1.4 million barrels of highly prized light, sweet crude a day. While many upstream facilities have been in the hands of the National Transitional Council for months, the countrys oil fields are spread throughout the vast and largely uncontrolled Sahara desert. With Gaddafi gone, the loyalists may become demoralized and abandon their cause, said analysts at Barclays. This, in turn, could make it easier for the international oil companies to return to areas that had been viewed as particularly volatile because of the presence of pro-Gaddafi forces. But there was a word of warning from the London-based bank. We believe that serious security challenges persist in Libya that could hinder efforts to restore Libyan production fully.

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