Kuwait Times

Saudis, Iraq agree on oil cut

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OPEC heavyweigh­ts Saudi Arabia and Iraq agreed yesterday on the need to extend a global cut in oil supply by nine months in an effort to prop up crude prices, removing a potential stumbling block as producing countries prepare to meet this week. Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said he did not expect any opposition within the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to extending the curbs for a further nine months, speaking after he met his Iraqi counterpar­t in Baghdad.

OPEC meets in Vienna on Thursday to consider whether to prolong the original deal reached in December in which OPEC and 11 non-member countries, including Russia, agreed to cut output by about 1.8 million barrels per day in the first half of 2017. The Saudi minister told a joint news conference with his Iraqi counterpar­t Jabar Ali Al-Luaibi that Iraq had given the “green light” to a proposal for a nine-month extension that would be presented to the meeting in the Austrian capital. He said a new agreement would be similar to the previous pact, with minor changes. He said any decision would not be finalised until OPEC meets.

Falih was paying a rare visit to Iraq in the latest effort by the top oil producer to convince its fellow OPEC member to extend supply cuts to ease a global glut. Luaibi said he agreed with Saudi Arabia on the need for a nine-month extension. Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC Russia have been pushing to extend the cuts from the end of June until March 2018. Iraq, OPEC’s second-largest and fastest-growing oil producer, had until yesterday voiced support only for a sixmonth extension.

It is the first time in nearly three decades that a senior Saudi energy official has visited Baghdad. OPEC wants to reduce global oil inventorie­s to their five-year average but so far has struggled to do so. Stockpiles are hovering near record highs, partly because of rising production in the United States, which is not part of the existing deal. “I believe we have a growing consensus (on the duration of cut extension),” OPEC’s Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo told reporters in Vienna. Iraq and Iran were the main stumbling blocks for OPEC in reaching its last outputcutt­ing decision in December.

Baghdad argued it had just started enjoying production growth after years of stagnation and Tehran said it needed to raise output after the lifting of Western sanctions. Iraq ended up agreeing to cap output in the first half of 2017 while Iran was allowed a slight rise in production. Nigeria and Libya were granted exemptions from cuts as their output suffered from unrest. Both have regained some volumes in recent months and are expected to add more soon, adding to OPEC’s challenge in rebalancin­g the market.

Goldman Sachs, one of the most active banks in commoditie­s trading, said yesterday a nine-month extension would help rebalance inventorie­s in 2017 and keep Brent prices near $57 per barrel. Brent futures were trading 0.6 percent higher at $53.92 a barrel yesterday at 1638 GMT. Goldman said OPEC should put pressure on American shale oil producers by creating a market structure known as backwardat­ion, when the future trading price of a commodity is below the current spot market value.

By extending cuts into 2018 and promising to boost output next year, OPEC could force the oil market into backwardat­ion that would scare away private equity and other investors who have been funding the American shale producers. “The binding force to sustainabl­y slow shale growth lies on the funding side,” Damien Courvalin, a Goldman analyst, wrote in the research note to clients. — Reuters

 ??  ?? BAGHDAD: Iraqi Oil Minister Jabar Ali Al-Luaibi (right) and Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih hold a joint press conference yesterday. — AP
BAGHDAD: Iraqi Oil Minister Jabar Ali Al-Luaibi (right) and Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih hold a joint press conference yesterday. — AP

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