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Saudi Arabia restores capacity to the East-West oil pipeline at 7 million barrels per day after the attacks

Saudi Arabia said that it had restored the full capacity of the East-West oil pipeline to about seven million barrels per day. This was after assessing the damage caused by the attacks on the energy sector during the Iran conflict.

According to the ministry, the energy facilities and pipelines that were damaged during the conflict are now operational again.

Saudi Arabia did not say who was behind the attack, but it has intercepted Iranian missiles and drones many times in recent weeks.

The strikes also disrupted key oil, gas and refining sites, as well as petrochemical, electricity and petrochemical sites, in Riyadh and the Eastern Province.

RESTORE OUTPUT TO CONTINUE SUPPLY

Saudi Arabia said that the attacks on Thursday had reduced its oil production by approximately 600,000 barrels a day, and its East-West Pipeline throughput by about 700,000.

Saudi Arabia has only one crude export route, the East-West Pipeline, due to the closure of Strait of Hormuz. Reports on Wednesday claimed that Iran had attacked the 'pipeline just hours following the ceasefire.

The ministry said it had'recovered affected volumes' from the Manifa field, where production had been reduced previously by approximately?300,000.

The ministry said that work was underway to restore the full output at the Khurais plant after attacks on it reduced Saudi Arabia's capacity by a further?300,000 bpd.

The company said that a quick recovery would improve the "reliability and consistency of supplies for local and global markets." Reporting by Menna Alaa Al-Din, Muhammad Al Gebaly and Bernadette B. Baum

(source: Reuters)