Libya's Waha Oil has raised crude output to a multi-year high of 365,000 b/d, the firm said.
If sustained, the increase would mark a significant gain for the company and support higher exports of its medium sweet Es Sider grade.
Waha Oil — a joint venture between Libya's state-owned NOC, France's TotalEnergies and US firm ConocoPhillips — produced 282,000 b/d in 2024 and 280,000 b/d in 2023, according to central bank data.
The company said the latest boost was the result of previous maintenance work, the restart of shut-in wells, and the drilling of new wells.
Maintaining output at these levels will be challenging. Like other producers in Libya, Waha Oil has faced difficulties in sustaining production because of ageing infrastructure and politically driven shutdowns in recent years.
Waha Oil is central to Libya's long-standing goal of boosting crude production to 2mn b/d, up from around 1.4mn b/d.
State-owned NOC is locked in contractual talks with TotalEnergies and ConocoPhillips, which are seeking improved terms before advancing developments such as the 100,000 b/d North Gialo project and the 80,000 b/d NC-98 project.

