Saudi Arabia pledges 'measurable' oil supply boost: report

24/06/2018 Argaam

 

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) agreed with Russia and other oil-producing allies on Saturday to raise output from July, with Saudi Arabia pledging a “measurable” supply boost but giving no specific numbers, Reuters reported.

 

The organization had announced an OPEC-only production agreement on Friday, without clear output targets. Benchmark Brent oil rose by $2.5 or 3.4 percent on the day to $75.55 a barrel.

 

Non-OPEC oil producers agreed on Saturday to participate in the pact but a communique issued after their talks with the Vienna-based group provided no concrete numbers.

 

US President Donald Trump was among those wondering how much more oil OPEC would deliver. “Hope OPEC will increase output substantially. Need to keep prices down!” Trump wrote on Twitter after OPEC announced its Friday decision.

 

The United States, China and India had urged oil producers to release more supply to prevent an oil deficit that could undermine global economic growth.

 

OPEC and non-OPEC said in their statement that they would raise supply by returning to 100 percent compliance with previously agreed output cuts, after months of underproduction.

 

Khalid Al-Falih, the Saudi Energy Minister, said OPEC and non-OPEC combined would pump roughly an extra 1 million barrels per day (bpd) in coming months, equal to 1 percent of global supply.

 

The Kingdom will increase output by hundreds of thousands of barrels, he said, with exact figures to be decided later.

 

“We already mobilized the Aramco machinery, before coming to Vienna, pre-empting this meeting,” Falih said, referring to the Saudi state oil company.

 

Meanwhile, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said his country would add 200,000 bpd in the second half of this year.

 

Asked to what extent the decision to increase supply had been driven by pressure from Trump, Novak said: “It is obvious that we are not being driven by tweets but base our actions on deep market analysis.”

 

“Some of the countries ... are not going to be able to produce, so the others will. And that implies there will be indirectly a reallocation,” Al-Falih said, adding that OPEC could hold an extraordinary meeting before its next formal talks due on Dec. 3 or adjust deliveries in September, when its monitoring committee meets, if global oil supply fell further because of sanctions on Iran.

 

OPEC and its allies have since last year been participating in a pact to cut output by 1.8 million bpd. The measure had helped rebalance the market in the past 18 months and lifted oil to around $75 per barrel from as low as $27 in 2016.

 

However, unexpected outages in Venezuela, Libya and Angola have effectively brought supply cuts to around 2.8 million bpd in recent months.

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