Arab Times

Iran may support OPEC action on oil

Producers to meet at Sept 26-28 forum in Algeria

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DUBAI/LONDON, Aug 23, (RTRS): Iran is sending positive signals that it may support joint action to prop up the oil market, sources in OPEC and the oil industry said, potentiall­y aiding efforts to revive a global deal on freezing production levels at talks next month.

OPEC’s third-largest producer has been boosting output after the lifting of Western sanctions in January. Tehran refused to join a previous attempt this year by OPEC plus non-members such as Russia to stabilise production, and talks collapsed in April.

Though Iran has not yet decided whether to join a new effort, Tehran appears to be more willing to reach an understand­ing with other oil producers, the sources said.

Venezuelan Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino last week toured oil-producing countries including Saudi Arabia and Iran to rally support for a deal. Despite rising this year, oil at around $49 a barrel is less than half its level of mid-2014.

Cooperate

“Iran is reaching its pre-sanctions production level soon and after that it can cooperate with the others,” said a source familiar with Iranian thinking after del Pino’s visit to Tehran.

“In general, Iran prefers more actions from the OPEC side rather than just freezing at the maximum production level of all members. If this freezing issue helps prices to improve, Iran by positive words of support, will help.”

Members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries are due to meet informally in Algeria next month on the sidelines of the Internatio­nal Energy Forum. Russia is also expected to attend the IEF.

Venezuela, whose economy has been hit hard by the oil price collapse, has for months sought to rally producers towards an agreement to limit production. Del Pino was in Tehran on Aug 15 before flying to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia.

Iran confirmed its participat­ion in the OPEC meeting in Algeria, an OPEC source said on Tuesday.

Russia, which in April was ready to freeze production, now wants to see an internal agreement among OPEC before it commits to rejoining an initiative.

“Negotiatio­ns are ongoing. I see positive signs coming from OPEC ‘majors’,” said a senior industry source familiar with the discussion­s, referring to Riyadh and Tehran.

“Russia wants to see an OPEC agreement before committing anything. So (OPEC members) are busy among themselves formulatin­g an agreement.”

OPEC sources say Iran’s participat­ion in a production pact has been the main stumbling block in reaching a deal.

The previous attempt to freeze output at January levels collapsed in April after Saudi Arabia said it wanted all producers, including Iran, to join the initiative.

Tehran insists it will be ready for joint action only once it regains pre-sanctions output of 4 million barrels per day (bpd). It pumped 3.6 million bpd in July, OPEC figures show.

But since the appointmen­t of Khalid alfalih as Saudi energy minister in April, Riyadh has taken a softer tone towards

Iran at OPEC. The group is likely to revive freeze talks in September as Saudi Arabia appears to want higher prices.

Besides Iran, output levels in Nigeria and Libya could also complicate reaching

a deal. While Saudi Arabia, Iran and Russia have reached record production since April, Nigeria’s hit its lowest in more than two decades due to attacks on oil sites. Libya is pumping a fraction of its pre-conflict rate. “The difficult question for all will be defining the freeze — at what level of production. Agreeing a number may be a challenge — unless

they all agree to allow some form of flexibilit­y?” the senior industry source said.

An OPEC source from a main Middle East oil producer agreed.

“Freezing output now is difficult, everyone is raising production. And even if, and I am saying ‘if’ ... we agreed to a freeze, no one will commit to stick to it,” the source said.

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