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Saudi increases oil output to record high of 12.3 mbpd

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Saudi Arabia will raise its crude supply to a record high in April, the kingdom announced on Tuesday, as it ratcheted up a standoff with Moscow over market share and appeared to reject Russian overtures for new talks.

The clash of oil titans Saudi Arabia and Russia sparked a 25 per cent slump in crude prices on Monday, triggering panic selling and heavy losses on Wall Street’s main stock indexes, already hit badly by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

US President Donald Trump spoke with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in a call on Monday to discuss global energy markets, the White House said on Tuesday.

Amin Nasser, CEO of Saudi Aramco, said the oil giant would increase supply to 12.3 million barrels per day (bpd) in April for customers inside the kingdom and abroad.

That’s 300,000 bpd above its maximum production capacity, indicating Aramco may also free up crude from storage.

Saudi Arabia has also agreed with Kuwait to resume output from jointly operated oilfields in the so-called Neutral Zone, production which is not accounted for under Aramco’s output capacity of 12 mbpd.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Russia’s ambassador to the US on Monday that energy markets needed to stay “orderly” amid rising concerns that extra supply from Saudi Arabia and Russia could trigger bankruptci­es among highercost US shale oil producers.

Saudi Arabia has been pumping around 9.7 million bpd in the past few months. The kingdom holds hundreds of millions of barrels of oil in storage so its can supply oil above its production capacity. Brent oil prices jumped 8 per cent on Tuesday above $37 per barrel after Russian energy minister Alexander Novak said Moscow was ready to discuss new measures with Opec, effectivel­y offering an olive branch to Riyadh.

But Saudi Arabia’s Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman appeared to rebuffed the idea. “I fail to see the wisdom for holding meetings in May-june that would only demonstrat­e our failure in attending to what we should have done in a crisis like this and taking the necessary measures,” Prince Abdulaziz told Reuters.

Riyadh’s unpreceden­ted hike in crude supply follows the collapse of talks between Opec and other producers led by Russia — a grouping known as Opec+ — which had sought to extend their joint efforts to curb supply beyond the end of March.

Three years of cooperatio­n among Opec+ producers ended in acrimony on Friday after Moscow refused to support deeper production cuts to support prices hit by the coronaviru­s outbreak. Opec responded by removing all limits on its own output.

 ??  ?? Iraq followed Saudi Arabia by cutting the price for its Basrah Light crude by $5 a barrel for April in Asia, according to an announceme­nt on Tuesday
Iraq followed Saudi Arabia by cutting the price for its Basrah Light crude by $5 a barrel for April in Asia, according to an announceme­nt on Tuesday

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