Global Times

OPEC likely to curb oil supplies for 2018

Decision made despite potential output disruption­s next year: Gulf sources

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The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries ( OPEC) is likely to stay the course by keeping its current curb on oil production in place for the whole of 2018 despite potential output disruption­s next year, Gulf OPEC sources said.

The OPEC, plus Russia and nine other producers, have cut overall output by about 1.8 million bpd since January.

The pact runs to March 2018, but the producers are considerin­g extending it.

OPEC is scheduled to next meet at its headquarte­rs in Vienna on November 30.

Venezuela’s oil production, which has been falling by about 20,000 barrels per day ( bpd) per month since last year, is on track to fall an additional 240,000 bpd next year as US sanctions and a lack of infrastruc­ture investment hobble operations.

Oil flow from other OPEC members such as Nigeria and Libya continue to see supply disruption.

But top oil exporter Saudi Arabia and OPEC are unlikely to raise output elsewhere next year to compensate for this decline, as the exporting group wants to remain focused on reducing the level of oil stocks in the Organisati­on for Economic Co- operation and Developmen­t industrial­ized countries to their five- year averages, one OPEC source familiar with Saudi thinking on its oil policy said.

“OPEC is likely to stay the course for the rest of 2018. We want to see commercial stocks going down,” the source said.

Another OPEC source said there was a high risk of a supply drop from Venezuela next year but that does not necessaril­y mean that OPEC will raise output elsewhere to make up for the decline.

The first OPEC source said that output from the Latin American OPEC nation could fall in 2018 by 300,000- 600,000 bpd, noting that the risk of supply disruption­s from other OPEC producers also remained high.

“The feeling in OPEC is that $ 60 [ a barrel] should be the floor for oil prices next year,” the first source said.

The market has been concerned that once the supply cut deal comes to an end, producers will increase supplies again, causing prices to fall.

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