Arab Times

Saudi, Kuwait signal output cut extension

Iraq could ask to be exempted

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ABU DHABI, April 20, (RTRS): Leading Gulf oil exporters Saudi Arabia and Kuwait gave a clear signal on Thursday that OPEC plans to extend into the second half of the year a deal with non-member producers to curb supplies of crude.

Consensus is growing among oil producers that a supply restraint pact that started in January should be prolonged after its initial sixmonth term, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said.

“There is consensus building but it’s not done yet,” Falih told reporters at a conference in the United Arab Emirates.

Kuwait’s oil minister Essam al-Marzouq said he expected the agreement to be extended. “Russia is on board preliminar­ily ... Compliance from Russia is very good,” Marzouq said.

OPEC Secretary-General Mohammed Barkindo, noting that Marzouq chairs a committee that measures compliance with the cuts, said: “It is significan­t that the Kuwaiti minister has come out in public and said this.”

OPEC is keen that non-member producers play their promised part in supporting the group’s efforts to lift prices, which have recovered to $53 a barrel from lows last year below $30.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and non-OPEC meet on May 25 to discuss extending the curbs that total 1.8 million barrels daily, two-thirds of that from OPEC.

OPEC sources said an internal assessment was that if they failed to extend the agreement, oil could slide back to $30-$40 a barrel.

Falih said his main concern was to reduce global oil inventorie­s, calling that “the main indicator for the success of the initiative”.

While inventorie­s held at sea and in producer countries have dropped, they remain stubbornly high in consumer regions, particular­ly in Asia and the United States.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency said last week that inventorie­s in industrial­ised countries were still 10 percent above the five-year average, a key gauge for OPEC.

OPEC seems to be encouraged by the contributi­on of non-OPEC producers to the output cuts.

Marzouq said there was a “noticeable increase in compliance from nonOPEC”. Joint compliance among OPEC and non-OPEC in March was above 90 percent, he said.

Marzouq said another African nation, which he did not identify, had expressed interest in joining the 24-country effort.

One hold-out for an extended deal may be Iraq. Baghdad might seek to be exempt and ask to boost its own output, the leader of the nation’s Shi’ite ruling coalition, Ammar al-Hakim, told Reuters.

 ?? (AFP) ?? The energy ministers of Qatar (left), Mohammed bin Saleh al-Sada, UAE’s Suhail al-Mazrouei (center), and Saudi Khaled al-Falih, attend the 3rd GCC Petroleum Media Forum on April 20, in Abu Dhabi. Al-Falih said that oil-producting countries might have...
(AFP) The energy ministers of Qatar (left), Mohammed bin Saleh al-Sada, UAE’s Suhail al-Mazrouei (center), and Saudi Khaled al-Falih, attend the 3rd GCC Petroleum Media Forum on April 20, in Abu Dhabi. Al-Falih said that oil-producting countries might have...

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