The Asian Age

Opec monitoring situation, boost unlikely

■ Crude oil supply may not be hit immediatel­y even if US sanctions Iran

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Dubai, Jan. 8: Opec is monitoring unrest in Iran as well as Venezuela’s economic crisis, but the group will only boost output if there are significan­t and sustained production disruption­s from those countries, a senior Opec source from a major Gulf oil producer said.

Venezuela’s economic troubles have hit the country’s oil output, which is at near 30- year lows, but Iran’s output has not been affected by a wave of antigovern­ment protests.

Traders said political tensions in Iran, the thirdlarge­st producer in the Opec, had pushed prices higher.

Brent crude, the internatio­nal benchmark, was trading at around $ 67.52 a barrel, on Monday. Brent hit $ 68.27 high last week, the highest since May 2015, on Iran tensions.

Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s defacto leader, wants to see oil prices above $ 60 a barrel, to boost the valuation of its national oil company Aramco ahead of an IPO later this year and to reduce the gap in its state budget, Saudi sources have said.

“Even if there was a supply disruption ( from Iran or Venezuela)... Opec will not raise output,” the senior Opec source said.

“Opec’s policy is to bring inventorie­s down to their normal levels and will stay the course, unless the disruption in supply of something like 1,000,000 barrels per day persists for more than a month, and causes shortages of crude supply to consumers.”

Venezuela’s dilapidate­d energy sector is struggling as US sanctions and a lack of capital hobble operations, and its economic crisis threatens to do further harm to the Opec country.

The senior source also said the oil market was on its way to being re- balanced, but so far global inventorie­s remained above their five- year average and much more time was needed to drain the oil glut.

“Any change in production limits must be driven by a change in market fundamenta­ls and not just speculatio­ns for a short period of time, for Opec to change the output ceiling,” he said.

The protests in Iran that began in late December have posed no immediate threat to oil production but there is concern that US President Donald Trump may reimpose sanctions on Iranian oil, which could disrupt oil exports.

Mr Trump must decide by mid- January whether to continue waiving US sanctions on Iran’s oil exports under the terms of an internatio­nal nuclear deal. The senior source also said that while more US sanctions on Iranian oil were possible, they would take time to affect oil supplies and so their impact was difficult to gauge.

OPEC, supported by Russia and other nonmembers, began to reduce output a year ago to remove an oil glut built up in the previous two years.

Compliance has been high, as producers have decided to extend the supply pact until the end of 2018. Opec’s cuts are helping to reduce global inventorie­s, even as production continues to rise in the United States. US production rose to 9.78 million barrels in the last week.

Opec’s policy is to bring inventorie­s down to their normal levels and will stay the course, unless the disruption in supply of something like 10 lakh barrels per day persists for more than a month, and causes shortages of crude supply to consumers — OPEC OFFICIAL

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