The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Libyan Oil Gets Shut Down Over Government Duel || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: August 29, 2024As a result of the power struggle between the two governments in Libya, roughly 70% oil production in the country has been shut down. This could significantly impact global oil supplies and is a glimp...se at the instability within Libya. Full Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/libyan-oil-gets-shut-down-over-government-duel
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Hey, everybody. Peter Zion here coming to you from a bright Colorado day. And today we're going to talk about a country that I haven't brought up in over a year of Libya.
Basically, the Libyan National Oil Company announced that it's shutting down production at a couple of major fields.
Collectively, Libya produces about a million barrels a day. And the announcements were going to affect over 70% of that.
Whether or not there's going to be more, we don't know.
This is a crazy story. Okay. So if you remember back to the two,
thousands. In the early days after the Iraq war, a number of governments were led by
Tin Poc dictators who were so arrogant that they were convinced that actually the Iraq war was
about them. It was a warning for them. And so they rushed to cut deals with various powers
in order to make sure that they weren't the target of the already planned invasion. So in the
case of Turkmenistan, you had a guy basically rush into the Russians' arms. And in the
of Libya, you had Gaddafi appealing to the United States and voluntarily turning over his
proto-WMD program to try to make sure that he wouldn't be knocked off like Saddam was.
Well, that was the beginning of a series of processes that led to a little bit of a political
opening in Libya that ultimately culminated into a bit of a civil war with NATO Special
Forces. Basically, after six months of just waiting for somebody to take off Gaddafi, basically
led these militant forces to the presidential.
palace and the government collapsed. Since then, a new government has been put in place,
internationally recognized, based in Tripoli, but they were supposed to have elections over 10 years ago,
and they never did, so they lack legitimacy. That's in the western part of the country where most
the people are in the eastern part of the country. You've got another government based in Benghazi
that is a mix of Russian-backed groups and mercenaries and Islamists and a guy named Haftar,
who's a real asshat. Anyway, what has been going on in the last 12 years is that all of the
oil, most of which is produced by the eastern government, is processed through the central bank,
which is the only institution in the country that has access to foreign currency and can do
forex transactions, and it is headquartered in the western part of the government where the
legitimate government is. Both sides have been mucking with the equivalent of the Federal
Reserve in this country in order to get a bigger cut of the money for themselves and deny money
from the other side. The most recent development is the Tripoli government in the West has
kidnapped a couple senior staffers and tried to push out the chairman of the central bank
in order to get their way. So the folks on the Benghazi side where the oil is have said,
you know, screw you guys. We control most of the oil, so we're just not going to produce it so
no money comes in anyway. And so we have 700,000 barrels a day that are going offline. It might
actually increase in the days and weeks to come. It could be offline longer than just this
political dispute because Libyan oil, especially the stuff in the eastern part of
the country is very waxied. If it's not kept warm, it basically turns everything into a soft
candle, including the pipelines, which will take a lot of maintenance to clear out. Now,
this has a lot of implications for a lot of people. The Russians are going to be pissed off because
they have managed to get themselves a cut of the energy revenues. The Italians are both on the
pro and the con side of this. Pro in that they are the ones that end up taking and refining
most of the crew that comes out of Libya just because of proximity. But they are,
also have refining capacity that can handle over twice what the country actually uses.
They're a refining hub for southern Europe.
So you'd actually have more pain in places like Spain and France and throughout
southeastern Europe and the Balkans because they're going to make money regardless.
Part of the problem here is that with Russian crude no longer part of the European diet,
Libyan crude was one of the substitutes.
Another big winner is going to be in the United States because while the Libyan crude is
wax. It's also pretty light and pretty sweet and has a fairly similar chemical makeup,
minus the wax, as you a shale crude. And the U.S. exports three to four million barrels of that
at day. And having, you know, another half a million to a million barrels of demand out of
Southern Europe is something that would make American producers quite happy.
This is just what Libya is going to look like until one side or the other wins,
or the two sides come together and form unity.
government, which is definitely not going to happen.
The only other reason that there might be any hope is that there might be someone in Europe,
France or Italy, most notably, who decides to go in knockheads together and basically just take
over the fields and run the country themselves as a colony.
We're not there yet.
We don't have energy shortages in Europe at the moment, and they've managed to find a lot of
ways to adapt to Russian stuff going offline.
And Libya, a million barrels a day, it's not that that's insignificant, but it's not enough
of a shock to cause a political or military action out of the European countries.
But it is a little bit more pressure.
So if something were to happen to say the Persian Gulf, which thank God has been one of the
most stable parts of the world these last couple of years, then we're in a different world.
So it's something to keep an eye on.
It's more amusing than problematic at the moment, which I can't believe I'm saying that about
the loss of nearly a million barrels of crude.
but this is the world we live in today.
Watch the Europeans.
They're the ones that have the agency to do something about this
if stuff gets real.
