Libya oil project due to come online this year
1 September 2025
The new early production facility (EPF) that is being installed at Libya’s Mabruk field is expected to come online between 15 November and 15 December this year, according to industry sources.
The facility is expected to have production ramped up to 30,000-35,000 barrels a day (b/d) of oil before the end of January 2026.
The Mabruk oil field is operated by Mabruk Oil Operations, a joint venture of Libya’s National Oil Corporation (NOC) and France’s TotalEnergies.
One source said: “When the facility comes online, production will be gradually increased over a time period of around four to six weeks.
“Six weeks will be enough to optimise production. Things are going very well with the project and it is being rigged up right now.
“There is some uncertainty about how much oil the wells are going to produce and how much the wells have been damaged.”
The Mabruk field currently has a small EPF installed that has a maximum production of about 7,000 b/d.
Several wells are connected to the existing EPF at the moment, but when the bigger EPF comes online, all of the wells from the field will be hooked up to the new facility.
Production operations via the small EPF started on 9 March 2025 at a rate of 5,000 b/d, according to NOC.
When production started in March, it was the first time that the field had produced oil in more than 10 years.
In 2015, the terrorist group Islamic State attacked the Mabruk oil field in Libya, killing guards, abducting foreign workers and forcing the field to shut down.
The larger EPF that is being installed is being leased by Mabruk Oil Operations from US-based SLB.
It is being installed by Libya-based Black Gold Automation & Control, which has been subcontracted by SLB
The smaller EPF, which was commissioned earlier this year, was installed directly by SLB.
More than a year ago, SLB was awarded the project to develop upstream facilities at the Mabruk field as part of a scheme to restart production.
The project had an estimated investment value of $150m.
The onshore Mabruk field, also known as C17, is located about 140 kilometres southeast of Libya’s El-Sider oil terminal.
Produced crude oil from the field will be transported to the nearby Al-Dhara oil field and then will be exported from the El-Sider oil terminal.
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The project, known as Olefins IV, is estimated to be worth $500m, according to MEED Projects.
The latest approval from KPC for the project comes after the availability of the necessary feedstock for the project was confirmed, according to KPC’s most recent annual report.
In July, MEED reported that feasibility studies for the project had been completed, but PIC was waiting for confirmation of the volumes of gas that would be available for the project as feedstock.
The Olefins IV project is expected to use natural gas produced by upstream operator Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), another KPC subsidiary.
There is currently uncertainty at PIC about when the front-end engineering and design work for the project will commence, according to industry sources.
As part of PIC’s long-term strategy, which looks ahead to 2040, it is aiming to scale up its portfolio and leverage partnerships to add value.
The company has stated that it aims to expand its core portfolio both within and outside Kuwait through greenfield and brownfield projects, with the goal of achieving a leading global position.
It has also said that it wants to expand into downstream derivatives linked to its base petrochemicals portfolio.
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