Home News Production Cut Tops OPEC November 30 Session, Tension Mounts

Production Cut Tops OPEC November 30 Session, Tension Mounts

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Hope that members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) may get the backing of non-members like Russia to agree to a production cut emerged on Monday, November 28 as OPEC experts met and recommended to their ministers on how to go about the process.

OPEC on Monday, also tried to rescue a deal to limit oil output, fuelling tensions among the producer group and non-OPEC member Russia, with top exporter Saudi Arabia saying markets would rebalance even without an agreement.

OPEC experts started a meeting in Vienna at 0900 GMT and were due to make recommendations to their ministers on how exactly the group should reduce production when it meets on Wednesday, November 30.

Meanwhile, the Algerian and Venezuelan oil ministers were to travel to Moscow on Monday and Tuesday, November 29  in a final push to persuade Russia to take part in cuts instead of merely freezing output, which has reached new highs in the past year.

In September, OPEC, which accounts for a third of global oil production, agreed to cap output at around 32.5-33.0 million barrels per day versus the current 33.64 million bpd to prop up oil prices, which have more than halved since mid-2014.

The meeting on Novembr 30 was expected to rubber-stamp that deal, with Russia and some other non-OPEC producers such as Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan also contributing.

But doubts emerged in recent weeks as OPEC’s No.2 and 3 producers, Iraq and Iran, expressed reservations about the mechanics of output reductions and Saudi Arabia voiced concern about Russia’s willingness to cut.

On Friday, November 25,  OPEC canceled an experts meeting with non-OPEC producers scheduled for November 28 after Saudi Arabia said the organization needed to sort out its differences first.

Over the weekend, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said oil markets would rebalance even without an output-limiting pact. He had previously said Riyadh was keen for a deal.

“NOBODY KNOWS”

Doubts about OPEC’s ability to deliver promised cuts sent Brent crude down 2 percent initially on Monday to less than $47 a barrel. Prices later recovered to trade up 1 percent after Iraq’s oil minister said he remained optimistic.

Some analysts including Morgan Stanley and Macquarie have said oil prices will correct sharply if OPEC fails to reach a deal, potentially going as low as $35 per barrel.

As OPEC experts turned up at the group’s headquarters on Monday, one delegate who had previously stated that a deal would be done, said this time: “I am not sure.”

Another delegate, when asked about the prospects for a deal, said: “Nobody knows yet”.

Iraqi Oil Minister Jabar Ali al-Luaibi, upon arrival in Vienna, declined to say whether Iraq was ready to cut output: “We are optimistic. We hope we (will) have agreement. We will cooperate with OPEC members to reach agreement acceptable to all.”

OPEC ministers started arriving in Vienna on Sunday, November 27  for the group’s regular twice-yearly talks but Saudi Arabia’s Falih was not expected to land before Tuesday evening, leaving little time for traditional pre-meeting discussions with peers.

Iranian semi-official news agency MEHR published an editorial on Sunday accusing Saudi Arabia of declaring a new “war on oil prices” and reneging on its promises to limit output.

The tone contrasted with Iranian news agencies’ more upbeat coverage of OPEC’s informal meeting in September in Algeria, when the initial deal was reached.

 

.Source: Reuter

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