Syrians take up backyard refining of crude oil

Local tribes have been taking up refining since the Bashar Al Assad regime lost control over oilfields in north and east Syria.

Ahmed, a 35-year-old farmer-turned-refiner, works on refining crude oil brought from Deir Ezzor province into a pit in the Al Raqqa countryside where it will be distilled as part of the refining process to produce fuel.
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Khniz, Syria // Columns of black smoke rise from several points along the road in part of northern Syria. Here the smoke is not a sign of air strikes but of crude oil being processed in makeshift refineries.

"People started doing it about one year ago but at that time we didn't know how to," says Ahmed, a 35-year-old farmer-turned-refiner.

"We got the knowledge from someone from around here who had learnt in Saudi Arabia", he says, standing next to a big metal tank containing crude oil.

Ahmed and his brother Abdallah, a former driver, started their refinery operation three months ago, along with many other locals, as the regime lost control over oilfields in north and east Syria.

Their tank has a capacity of 1,000 litres, though they only make it two-thirds full at a time because the refining process requires air, they say.

A fire is lit underneath to heat the tank, eventually boiling the crude, and producing thick black smoke.

As the crude boils, various products run off through two tubes, which are cooled as they pass underwater through three ponds and then into a container that collects the resulting products.

What comes out first, the brothers term "cooking gas", which they simply allow to escape. Next comes petrol, then kerosene used in stoves, then diesel fuel.

The pair call the final product "fat" and either add it back into the fire under the tank, or occasionally mix it with the diesel for use in some "heavy vehicles".

This process is a crude form of the fractional distillation process used at oil refineries around the world, and has proved profitable for the brothers.

Boiling and refining a tank takes them about four hours, and they estimate they make a 50-60 per cent profit on each barrel, selling the products to locals.

"Business is good," Ahmed says smiling, his face and hands blackened by the smoke.

The brothers are unlikely to win any health and safety awards. Neither wears gloves nor protective gear, and Abdullah smokes a cigarette on the job.

"It's OK as long as you are not right next to the benzene," he says matter-of-factly.

He shrugs off the health risks, saying "nothing will happen to us".

The brothers get their raw material from the Deir Ezzor countryside, driving two and a half hours in their vehicle to purchase oil barrels from middlemen or those in control of the oilfields: local tribes and militant fighters with Jabhat Al Nusra.

Al Nusra got involved in the oil business about six months ago, they say.

"Al Nusra are operating in both lines, business and fighting," Ahmed says.

The group has been labelled a terrorist organisation by the United States and its leader has pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda chief Ayman Al Zawahiri.

But on the ground, Al Nusra has won respect from some locals for its fighting prowess, discipline and ability to organise daily life in rebel-held areas.

Ahmed says he is not a fan of the group, buying from them out of necessity.

Rebel brigades "Liwa Al Tawhid, Ahrar Al Sham, they are very good guys, but we don't like Al Nusra," he says.

The brothers buy crude about three times a week, picking up nine barrels a time.

"Each well has a different price, depending on the quality of its oil," says Ahmed.

One 2,200-litre barrel runs from 500 to 10,000 Syrian pounds (approximately Dh18-Dh3,700), but the cheapest barrels only yield about 50 litres of refined products, they say.

Local tribes first began controlling oilfields in the Deir Ezzor countryside about a year ago.

"People then didn't know how to do this refining, they would use the crude as they could, some heavy vehicles can use unrefined oil," Ahmed says.

"When these tribes discovered the oil wells, the revolution in Deir Ezzor was over, they used to be poor and it went from revolution to oil industry."

Deir Ezzor contains the largest energy reserves in Syria, which produced some 420,000 of barrels of oil a day before the United States and the European Union banned the import of Syrian petroleum in 2011.