Arab Times

Saudi to cut Oct oil allocation­s

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DUBAI, Sept 9, (RTRS): Saudi Arabia will cut crude oil allocation­s to its customers worldwide in October by 350,000 barrels per day, an industry source familiar with Saudi oil policy told Reuters.

The cuts in allocation­s are in line with Saudi Arabia’s commitment­s to the OPEC-led supply reduction pact, under which the top oil exporter is required to cut 486,000 bpd.

“Despite refiners’ request for more crude, the decision was made to maintain cuts,” the source said.

Despite “healthy and robust” demand and refining margins in Asia, state oil giant Saudi Aramco will cut supplies to the world’s biggest oil consuming region by 1.8 million barrels in October, with the reductions affecting mostly customers in Japan, the source said.

The deepest cuts in October were made to major oil companies where supplies were reduced by 225,000 bpd, while allocation­s to customers in Europe were lower by 70,000 bpd, the source added.

Initial indication­s show that exports to the United States in October will be lower than 600,000 bpd, the source added.

Oil inventorie­s in the United States are declining and getting close to their fiveyear average, the source said. Bringing global oil inventorie­s down to their fiveyear average is a key marker for OPEC in measuring the success of the initiative.

OPEC along with Russia and other non-OPEC nations agreed to cut production by around 1.8 million bpd from Jan. 1 until March 2018.

The deal to curb output propelled crude prices above $58 a barrel in January but they have since slipped back to a $50 to $54 range as the effort to drain global inventorie­s has taken longer than expected.

Rising output from US shale producers has offset the impact of the output curbs, as has a climb in production from Libya and Nigeria.

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