OREANDA-NEWS. Oil prices on both sides of the Atlantic rose for a third straight session because of worries over supplies from OPEC nations Libya and Iraq.

 Brent crude moved back toward a four-month high near USD 110 a barrel following last week's sell-off, while U.S. crude hit the highest level in six sessions, rising above USD 107. Labor unrest in Libya has forced oil output to its lowest since the 2011 civil war, with the country's total oil production well below 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) from 1.3 million bpd in June.

 This sparked fear of a possible supply shortfall in the northern hemisphere and boosted prices, analysts said.

 Libya's state National Oil Corp. said in a statement to shippers that it could not provide September loading schedules, normally due by now, as on-again, off-again strikes paralyse its ports.

 The disruptions can be "manageable" if Saudi Arabia maintains high production, said Sarah Emerson, managing director of Energy Security Analysis Inc in Wakefield, Massachusetts. "The question is how long does it last. Today it's manageable."

 Richard Mallinson, chief policy analyst at London-based consultancy Energy Aspects, told Reuters Global Oil Forum, that output was around 400,000 bpd and exports at around 300,000 bpd. Libya has the capacity to produce about 1.6 million bpd.

 Maintenance work at Iraq's key southern oil export hub is also expected to cut supplies by 500,000 bpd in September, lending further support to prices in the medium term.

 Front-month Brent crude oil futures for September delivery rose 85 cents to settle at USD 109.82 a barrel after touching an intraday high of USD 110.06, its highest since it hit a four-month high of USD 110.09 on Aug. 2.

 Brent rose back above its 200-day moving average on Monday at USD 108.17, a technical marker watched by traders. The contract also fully breached the short-term 10-and-15 day moving averages.

 Trading in CME Group Inc's New York Mercantile Exchange Brent crude oil contract set a record on Tuesday, the exchange said, at 104,839 contracts, eclipsing the previous high of 90,390 reached late last week.

 Higher oil prices are already taking a toll on oil refiners in Europe that are expected to cut processing rates by about 500,000 bpd this week due to poor profit margins.

 In the United States, front month crude oil futures rose 72 cents to settle at USD 106.83 a barrel after trading as low as USD 105.56 during the session. U.S. crude's discount to Brent settled at USD 2.99 a barrel.

 Traders said prices were supported after the U.S. National Hurricane Center said a tropical wave in the Caribbean might become a cyclone in the oil-producing Gulf of Mexico in the coming days.