Contractors submit Libya port pipeline bids

13 April 2023

Contractors have submitted bids for a pipeline project in Libya that will transport around 30,000 barrels a day (b/d) of oil to the oil export port of Zueitina.

Bids were submitted on 6 March, according to information first obtained by the regional project-tracking service MEED Projects.

The pipeline will extend for 68.5 kilometres and stretch from a gas-oil separation plant (Gosp) in the Nafoura field.

Libya’s state-owned Arabian Gulf Oil Company (Agoco), the operator of the Nafoura oil field, is the client on the project.

One source said: “Bids have been submitted. Under the existing regulations, at least five contractors must participate for this to be signed off. If there are not enough bidders, then the project will have to be retendered.”

The names of the contractors and the number of participants in the bidding process are yet to be published by Agoco.

The pipeline will have a diameter of 12 inches and start at the facility known as Gosp6.

The project’s scope includes:

  • Pipeline installation
  • Associated equipment such as launcher, receiver, valves and block valve station
  • Laying fibre optic cable along the pipeline
  • Replacement of crude oil shipping pumps
  • Replacement of crude oil metering system with new prover loop
  • Upgrading the electrical and instrumentation system with the supply and installation of 1 MVA transformer
  • Supplying and installing a control room
  • Supplying and installing a cathodic protection system
  • Supplying and installing a fire detection and alarm system

Agoco has been executing several projects to ramp up production from the Nafoura oil field.

In the fourth quarter of 2022, it released a statement saying it had brought a third well online as part of its drilling campaign at the field.

The company said the well, given the code name G-318, came online on 8 November.

The G-318 well was the third of six planned wells being drilled as part of the campaign at the oil field.

The Nafoura oil field is located in the onshore Sirte Basin in eastern Libya.

The field has an estimated 7.5 billion barrels of oil in place, making it one of Libya’s major oil fields.

Production at the field declined sharply in the 1970s after peaking at over 380,000 b/d in 1969.

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Wil Crisp
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