Libya’s dinar has plunged to record lows, driven by a sharp decline in oil revenues and escalating political unrest. The Central Bank of Libya (CBL) devalued the currency by 13.3% on April 6, setting the official rate at 5.5677 dinars per U.S. dollar—the first such move since 2020. However, the black-market rate has soared to over 7.20 dinars per dollar, reflecting deepening economic instability.?
In a modest sign of recovery, Harouge Oil resumed production at its Amal Fields B-102 well, pumping 1,500 barrels per day. While this development offers a glimmer of hope, analysts caution that isolated production gains cannot offset broader declines in national oil revenues driven by political strife and operational disruptions.?
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The devaluation has sparked criticism from key governmental bodies. The Presidential Council and the High Council of State argue that the move exacerbates Libya’s fiscal woes and erodes citizens’ purchasing power. They cite an absence of a unified national budget and the proliferation of parallel spending entities as core drivers of the crisis.? This criticism could spark further unrest as the two rival clans that control Libya’s, east and west, continue to jockey for leverage over institutions.
Meanwhile, political factions in eastern Libya have shut down major oil fields in protest over disputes at the central bank, further curtailing oil exports—Libya’s primary source of foreign currency. The Central Bank reports that public debt now stands at 270 billion dinars, with forecasts indicating it could exceed 330 billion dinars by year’s end without urgent fiscal reforms.?
As international observers call for political reconciliation and robust economic reform, Libyan officials face mounting pressure to restore market confidence and stabilize an economy teetering on the brink of deeper crisis.?
Complicating matters, Russia has been increasing its influence in Libya, aligning with eastern factions and deploying military assets to strategic locations. This growing presence has raised concerns among Western nations, who fear that Libya could become a new front in broader geopolitical tensions in addition to the specter of another civil war.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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