The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Oil powers in Doha pow-wow as US$30 crude woes mount

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DOHA, QATAR: Top oil officials from Saudi Arabia, Russia and several key OPEC members will meet for their highest-level discussion in months, a potentiall­y pivotal sign that producers are at last preparing to tackle a devastatin­g supply glut.

The talks in the Qatari capital Doha, which had been kept under wraps until recent days, involve powerful Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi and his Russian counterpar­t Alexander Novak, sources said, two figures who must reach an accord for any coordinate­d global action to hold any hope of success.

They will be joined by Venezuela’s Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino, who has in recent weeks been visiting major oil producers to rally support for the idea of “freezing” production at current levels in an effort to halt a downward spiral in prices, sources have said.

Also expected to attend is the oil minister of Qatar, which holds the rotating presidency of OPEC (Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) this year, an important role in coordinati­ng consultati­ons among members and suggestion­s for extraordin­ary meetings of the group.

The agenda for Tuesday’s meeting was unclear, and the sources declined to provide any further details on it.

Del Pino made no comment on Monday when he arrived in Qatar.

The meeting comes after more than 18 months of declining oil prices, knocking prices below US$30 a barrel for the first time in over a decade.

The slump has been longer and deeper than anyone predicted, and the mood may be shifting among producers which until now have been determined to defend market share rather then prices.

Within OPEC there is a growing consensus that a decision must be reached on how to prop up prices, Nigerian oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu told Reuters in an interview late last week, revealing that he too would be travelling to Doha to meet with his Saudi and Qatari counterpar­ts.

Much has changed since the group’s fractious meeting in early December, the last big gathering of key oil ministers, when members “were hardly talking to one another. Everyone was protecting their own positional logic,” Kachikwu said.

Oil traders are on heightened alert for any sign of action. US crude rose more than 3 per cent early on Tuesday to trade back above US$30 a barrel, building on last Friday’s more-than-12-per cent surge amid growing speculatio­n over a deal.

While Venezuela has been by far the hardest-hit of any big producer, oil below US$30 a barrel is a fraction of what Russia needs to balance its budget as it is heads towards parliament­ary elections later this year.

Saudi finances are also suffering badly, running a US$98 billion budget deficit last year, which it seeks to trim this year.

Analysts cautioned that it was too soon to expect a sudden breakthrou­gh, even after a year and a half of tumbling oil prices.

Saudi Arabia has given no sign of wavering in its view that it would only cut in concert with other producers; Russia has been resolute that it cannot and will not cut back. And Iran is only now restoring exports after years of sanctions.

Yet the small, hush-hush nature of the meeting is sure to evoke memories of the secret talks of the late 1990s that eventually revived US$10 oil. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Top oil officials from Saudi Arabia, Russia and several key OPEC members will meet for their highest-level discussion in months, a potentiall­y pivotal sign that producers are at last preparing to tackle a devastatin­g supply glut. — AFP photo
Top oil officials from Saudi Arabia, Russia and several key OPEC members will meet for their highest-level discussion in months, a potentiall­y pivotal sign that producers are at last preparing to tackle a devastatin­g supply glut. — AFP photo

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