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Opec and allies to boost oil output

Saudi Arabia secures last-minute deal to overcome Iran’s veto threat

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LONDON: The Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and allies including Russia will boost oil production starting next month, offering relief to consumers after Saudi Arabia secured a last-minute deal to overcome Iran’s veto threat.

“We have an agreement” for a “nominal” production increase of one million barrels a day, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih told reporters in Vienna.

In reality, the accord will add about 700,000 barrels a day of oil to the market in the second half of the year because several members are unable to increase their output, said Nigeria’s Oil Minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu.

The agreement is a victory for Saudi Arabia and Russia, which for a month have advocated for a production increase to alleviate high prices. It’s also a success for US President Donald Trump, who has criticised Opec on Twitter for inflating the cost of fuel.

However, the final communique from the group’s meeting in Vienna left many unanswered questions about how the oil will flow to consumers. The document didn’t mention the production hike cited by Al-Falih, instead pledging that the group would focus on rolling back the deeper-than-intended cuts from nations such as Venezuela, returning their curbs to the level originally agreed in 2016.

Opec and its allies exceeded their pledged 1.8 million barrel-a-day production cut by 47% last month, according to Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak. That’s about 850,000 barrels a day of additional supply losses that have been largely unintentio­nal, reflecting the collapse in Venezuela’s oil industry and long-term declines in Mexican output.

Saudi Arabia has enough spare capacity to offset those losses and keep a lid on prices, but Al-Falih has acknowledg­ed that such a move isn’t politicall­y palatable for his fellow Opec members. The kingdom wants to preserve the hard-won unity of the group of 24 oil producers, whose cooperatio­n ended a three-year price slump.

The accord achieves that, while also serving the needs of consumers. It salvages an agreement that was very much in doubt on Thursday evening after Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh walked out of a meeting with fellow ministers, predicting nobody could persuade him to back an increase.

Iran has bridled at Trump’s interventi­on into the cartel’s policy since oil prices touched US$80 a barrel last month. Zanganeh has said the US president is to blame for high prices because of his unilateral withdrawal from the internatio­nal nuclear agreement and the imposition of fresh sanctions that could significan­tly curb Iran’s crude exports.

After all the internal Opec wrangling, which for weeks has whipsawed oil markets, the group’s president said yesterday’s deal was all about the needs of consumers. “This agreement that we reached is a testimony that we care about the consuming countries,” United Arab Emirates Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei, who is also Opec president, told reporters. “We listen when they say that they have a concern.” — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Output deal: Al-Falih, second left, speaks to reporters ahead of the Opec meeting in Vienna. Opec and its allies reached a preliminar­y agreement in the face of strong opposition from Iran to boost production. — Bloomberg
Output deal: Al-Falih, second left, speaks to reporters ahead of the Opec meeting in Vienna. Opec and its allies reached a preliminar­y agreement in the face of strong opposition from Iran to boost production. — Bloomberg

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