Libya aims to restart its 220,000 barrel-per-day Ras ​Lanuf oil refinery within six to 12 months ‌to supply the domestic market, National Oil Corporation (NOC) chairman Masoud Suleman told reporters in London.

The refinery, Libya’s largest, ​has been idle since 2013 amid an arbitration ​dispute between NOC and its Emirati partner in ⁠the plant Trasta.

NOC said on Monday it had signed ​a final agreement with Trasta to end the partnership, ​transferring the Ras Lanuf complex and refinery to full Libyan ownership and control.

“The budget was allocated,” Suleman said regarding the restart, ​adding NOC had the manpower and equipment needed for ​maintenance, which he expects will cost about $60 million.

Libya’s oil sector, the ‌country’s ⁠main source of income, has faced repeated disruption from local and wider political unrest since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi.

Last week, the 120,000 ​bpd Zawiya refinery ​shut due ⁠to nearby clashes.

Suleman said output from Ras Lanuf would mainly serve the domestic market ​and be marketed by NOC subsidiary Brega ​Oil ⁠Company.

NOC expects initial run rates of about 200,000 bpd, gradually ramping up to full capacity, he added. The ⁠refinery ​will run on Libya’s Amna crude ​grade.

Source:  Reuters