Administrative positions at the Arabian Gulf Oil Company:

The main headquarters is considered one of the company’s largest sites, as it includes multiple buildings for all technical and service departments.

It is considered the company’s second headquarters and is also responsible for marketing the company at the global level.

Service sites at the Arabian Gulf Oil Company:

The headquarters of the vehicle is considered to have a major role in providing all services for heavy transport, medium transport, as well as small cars in terms of the maintenance it performs monthly and annually. It is considered to have a unique nature as it enjoys a location separate from the company (the main headquarters) due to the large size and role of this site in the company. .

It is considered a service headquarters for the warehouses and contains one of the company’s most important departments, which is the Health, Safety and Environment Department.

Field locations at the Arabian Gulf Oil Company:

Masla field is located between the Sarir and Majid fields in areas 65 and 80, 500 kilometers southeast of Benghazi. It is considered one of the newest huge fields located in the Sirte Basin and was discovered in 1963 AD. Its production is pumped to the port of Hariga via the Sarir line and to the port of Ras Lanuf via the Majid Al-Nafoura line. Oil is extracted by natural and artificial lifting.

The production of the Sarir field is currently about 225 thousand barrels per day, and production can be increased to 300 thousand barrels by implementing closed well maintenance programs and drilling more development wells. Currently, part of the production from this field is pumped, about ten thousand barrels per day, to the Sarir refinery, and the rest of the production is pumped to the port of Hariga in Tobruk via a line 34 inches in diameter and 513 kilometers long. The reserve is approximately 45% of the total reserve recoverable by conventional means.

The Sarir refinery entered actual production in 1989 AD and was designed with a refining capacity of 10,000 barrels per day, and its products include gasoline, diesel, kerosene, and others.

Al Nafoura Field is divided into:

1- Al-Nafoura Awjila joint field, concession 51 and contract area 91, includes sub-complexes (2, 5, 4, 6). The production of this field currently amounts to about 35 thousand barrels per day, and the production is pumped via a 30-inch diameter line to the port of Ras Lanuf, as well as A 24-inch diameter line to Intisar Field and from there to Zueitina Port. The remaining reserve percentage is approximately 42% of the total reserve recoverable by conventional means.

2- Al Nafoura Field, which is not participating. It includes sub-complexes (1, 3, 7, 8, 9), and the current production is about 21 thousand barrels per day. The production of this field is pumped through a 30-inch diameter line to the port of Ras Lanuf through the Amal – Ras Lanuf system. The remaining reserve is approximately 39% of the total reserve recoverable by conventional means.

Al-Bayda field is affiliated with a group of oil fields, which are: Al-Dur field, Al-Mansour field, Baloun field, Umm Al-Faroud field, and Al-Kulaqa. The current production from Al-Bayda fields is about 11 thousand barrels per day. The production of Al-Bayda fields is pumped through a line with a diameter of 24 inches, then a line 30-inch diameter vessel belonging to FIBA ​​to the port of Ras Lanuf. The remaining reserve amounts to 34% of the total reserve recoverable by conventional means.

Majid field is located in areas 65 and 80, 400 kilometers southeast of Benghazi. It is considered one of the newest huge fields located in the Sirte Basin. It was discovered in 1969 AD. Its production is pumped to the port of Hariga via the Sarir line and to the port of Ras Lanuf via the Majid Al-Nafoura line, and oil is extracted from it by natural self-lift and artificial lift.

Within the framework of development projects that aim to increase the company’s production capacity, and within a short period of time, the Sinawon oil field was inaugurated, and this new field was put on production on Monday, 01/03/2011 AD, which constituted an important addition to the company’s oil production, and it is planned that The production of this field reaches about 20 thousand barrels per day, after completing all its production facilities. The concession (Mn 100) was granted to the Arabian Gulf Oil Company in October 2007, and the company was able to evaluate all available technical information, including seismic surveys and drilling results, and develop a plan for the production of this field, where it was completed and maintained. A number of wells from all producing classes, and on 12/31/2010, trial operations began to produce this field at a rate of (2000) barrels of oil per day, provided that the rest of the wells will continue to be installed successively to increase production rates, in addition to that, through seismic surveys and studies Geological and geophysical. It has been possible to identify a number of sites ready for drilling, as well as identifying a number of indicators. Geological and geophysical technical information is being completed to confirm their drilling.

The Hamada field consists of a group of fields: (M.N. 8), (M.N. 5), and (M.N. 7), in addition to the Zawiya station to receive oil. The current production of this field is about 10 thousand barrels per day, and it is pumped The field produces via a line 18 inches in diameter and 387 kilometers long to the Zawiya refinery. The percentage of remaining reserves in the Hamada fields is about 53% of the total reserve that can be recovered by conventional means.

Mr. Mustafa Sanalla, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National Oil Corporation, accompanied by Mr. Abu Al-Qasim Shanqir, Member of the Board of Directors, and Mr. Anwar Aqeel, Director of Production Department, inaugurated on Monday morning, 02/21/2022, and in the presence of Mr. Salah Al-Qatrani, Chairman of the Management Committee, and members of the Management Committee, both Mr. Boubacar Bin Amer, Member of the Committee. Management for exploration, production and information
Mr. Abdel-Muttalib Adam, member of the Management Committee for Engineering, Construction and Technical Affairs, and the department directors, Mr. Salem Bourqia, Director of Operations Department, Mr. Faraj Al-Barasi, Director of Transport Department, Mr. Tariq Al-Bakoush, Director of the Explored Fields Development Team, Mr. Imran Hussein Al-Zantani, Supervisor of the Tahara Field, Mr. Muftah Ibasit, Supervisor of the Hamada Field, and Mr. Muhammad Askar, Sinawon Field Controller, Mr. Jalal Al-Sharkasi, Relations and Communications Coordinator, and Mr. Ahmed Al-Haddad, Coordinator and Secretary of the Management Committee.
A large group of specialists, technicians and oil facility guards.

Oil port locations at the Arabian Gulf Oil Company:

The Hariga Oil Port is located on the southern shore of the Gulf of Tobruk. It was established in late 1964 AD, and the construction process took about two years. The Hariga Port consists of several areas that together form an interconnected unit that receives and stores crude oil, including the tanks area, the Al-Mashab area, The heaters area, the counters area, the ballast area, the jetties area, and the crude oil shipping area for oil tankers. The first shipment of it was exported on 01/10/1967 on board the tanker BRITCH CENTURA.

The Tobruk Oil Refinery is one of the oil castles operated by the Arabian Gulf Oil Company. The refinery was opened in 1986 AD and has a refining capacity of about 20,000 barrels per day of crude oil. The refinery supplies all its needs from the crude oil produced from the Sarir and Masla fields, and produces many petroleum products. Including: Diesel – a mixture of heavy and light naphtha, mazut, and cooking gas.

The refinery is managed and operated by competent national personnel in the technical and administrative fields, and it has a number of departments, including operations – maintenance – safety – industrial security – services – administrative affairs – supply – transportation – communications.

The refinery supplies the cooking gas factory of the Brega Company with gas to cover the needs of the Green Mountain areas. It also feeds the Tobruk steam station with diesel to operate electrical generators, in addition to supplying the city of Tobruk, its suburbs, and the Green Mountain regions with diesel.

The Arabian Gulf Oil Company pays great attention to the Tobruk refinery and seeks to develop it through future plans to expand the refinery to increase its production to cover a larger percentage of the local market’s need for petroleum derivatives.