Beiji refinery is among two to be shut down on the same day after fire at smaller refinery in Iraq's south
- guardian.co.uk,
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Gunmen attacked Iraq's largest oil refinery before dawn, killing a guard and detonating bombs that sparked a fire and forced the facility to halt operations, officials said.
A few hours later, a small refinery in the south shut down after a technical failure sparked a fire in a storage unit, an official said.
If not fixed swiftly, the two shutdowns could translate into long lines at fuel stations and longer electricity outages. The dearth of reliable electricity – some Iraqis get just a few hours a day – was one of the leading complaints of protesters during violent anti-government demonstrations across Iraq yesterday.
The attack on Iraq's largest refinery, Beiji, began at about 3.30am. Assailants carrying pistols fitted with silencers attacked guards and planted bombs near some production units for benzene and kerosene, said the spokesman for Salahuddin province, Mohammed al-Asi. One guard was killed and another wounded, al-Asi said.
Iraqi oil ministry spokesman Assem Jihad said an investigation would be launched and that he hoped operations could resume shortly.
The Beiji refinery, located about 155 miles (250km) north of Baghdad, has two sections. The attackers targeted the installation's North Refinery, which handles 150,000 barrels a day. The second section, the Salahuddin Refinery, is under renovation. It used to process 70,000 barrels per day.
At the height of the insurgency from 2004 to late 2007, the Beiji refinery was under control of Sunni militants who used to siphon off crude and petroleum products to finance their operations.
Hours after the Beiji facility was attacked, a small refinery in Samawa, a city on the Euphrates River about 230 miles (370km) south-east of Baghdad, went offline due to a fire in the storage unit, according to a local official.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the fire was caused by a technical failure, not foul play. He would not say when work would resume at the plant, which has the capacity of 30,000 barrels of a day.
Iraq's overall refining capacity is currently slightly more than 500,000 barrels per day. Its three main oil refineries – Dora, Shuaiba and Beiji – process slightly more than half of the 700,000 barrels-per-day capacity they had before the 2003 US invasion.
Iraq sits on the world's third-largest known oil reserves with an estimated 115bn barrels, but its production is far below its potential due to decades of war, UN sanctions, lack of foreign investment and insurgent attacks.
Iraq has been importing refined products since 2003 because of the dilapidated refining sector and booming local demand.
The closures could spell trouble for Iraqi consumers, especially at a time when the weather is just beginning to warm and more citizens will be relying on their air conditioning.
Also today, health officials and police said two teens, ages 12 and 18, died of injuries sustained in the anti-government protests, bringing the death toll for the day to 14.
On Friday, thousands marched on government buildings and clashed with security forces in cities across Iraq in an outpouring of anger, the largest and most violent anti-government protests in the country since political unrest began spreading in the Arab world weeks ago.
The protests, billed as a Day of Rage, were fueled by anger over corruption, chronic unemployment and shoddy public services from the Shiite-dominated government.
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