Tunisia Becomes Self-Sufficient in Fuel

Chergui gas field concession of the UK-based oil company Petrofac on the island of Kerkennah in Tunisia. AFP file photo
Chergui gas field concession of the UK-based oil company Petrofac on the island of Kerkennah in Tunisia. AFP file photo
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Tunisia Becomes Self-Sufficient in Fuel

Chergui gas field concession of the UK-based oil company Petrofac on the island of Kerkennah in Tunisia. AFP file photo
Chergui gas field concession of the UK-based oil company Petrofac on the island of Kerkennah in Tunisia. AFP file photo

The Tunisian Ministry of Industry, Energy and Mines has announced a 4,000 barrels per day increase in the domestic production of oil since April 23, saying production has inched at 39,692 bpd compared with 35,400 in Feb.

The current output meets 103 percent of local needs amid a sharp drop in demand for oil in the past months.

Government sources hinted at an improvement in local production if maintenance works were completed at several Tunisian oil wells.

Experts say that by reaching its production peak, the Nawara Gas Field would be able to cover about 30 percent of the energy deficit by meeting around 17 percent of local gas consumption, and contributing by around 700,000 barrels of condensed oil.

The Ministry of Finance has set the oil barrel at $65 in this year’s budget, boosting its revenues and helping its economy that has been battered by the drop in global oil prices.

In March, demand on oil plummeted by 21 percent as the government imposed a lockdown, crippling the transportation sector. The demand on gasoline declined by 25 percent while that on aviation fuel by 56 percent.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Industry, Energy and Mines decided to optimize all potentials in Tunisia to prioritize Tunisian oil in the short run. This aims to overcome the marketing woes facing the Tunisian Company of Petroleum Activities (ETAP) and Tunisian Company of Refining Industries.



Bahrain’s Jassim Alshirawi Elected Secretary General of International Energy Forum

Meeting of the IEF, chaired by Mohamed Kurdi of Saudi Arabia in Rome (IEF website)
Meeting of the IEF, chaired by Mohamed Kurdi of Saudi Arabia in Rome (IEF website)
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Bahrain’s Jassim Alshirawi Elected Secretary General of International Energy Forum

Meeting of the IEF, chaired by Mohamed Kurdi of Saudi Arabia in Rome (IEF website)
Meeting of the IEF, chaired by Mohamed Kurdi of Saudi Arabia in Rome (IEF website)

The Executive Board of the International Energy Forum (IEF) elected on Tuesday Jassim Alshirawi of Bahrain as the sixth IEF Secretary General at a meeting chaired by Mohamed Kurdi of Saudi Arabia in Rome.

Alshirawi will start his term as Secretary General on January 1, 2025 when the term of current Secretary General Joseph McMonigle ends.

“I am honored by the Executive Board's confidence in electing me as the organization’s next Secretary General,” Alshirawi said in a statement.

“I look forward to working with the board and Secretariat staff to facilitate and strengthen the dialogue of important energy issues and challenges facing our member countries,” he added.

Alshirawi had a distinguished career spanning more than 40 years in the energy industry, sustainability and energy efficiency, covering areas of engineering, management, and policy development and implementation.

Alshirawi was a member of the IEF's Executive Board from 2014 until 2021 and has been a member of the IEF's International Support Group since 2008.

He will be the first IEF Secretary General from the Middle East and North Africa region.

The IEF is the world's largest gathering of energy ministers from both producing and consuming countries as well as transit states.

Its membership represents 90% of global supply and demand for oil and gas.

The Secretary General serves as Chief Executive and Head of Mission of the IEF, which is headquartered in the Diplomatic Quarter of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

On Tuesday, the US Department of Energy congratulated Alshirawi on his election as the sixth Secretary General of the IEF.

“We look forward to working with him to advance a robust energy consumer-producer dialogue and help meet our collective energy security, access, and transition goals,” it wrote on X.