Times of Oman

Crude oil supply may be raised in second half of 2018: Survey

In a poll conducted with 66 oil industry executives, market traders and analysts, one week ahead of a critical Opec and nonOpec meeting in Vienna, 46 of those polled said they expected the world’s biggest oil exporters to raise output in the third and fou

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Times News Service

MUSCAT: Oil producing nations will abandon their historic pact to limit supply and raise oil output to meet global demand in the second half of 2018, according to a Gulf Intelligen­ce industry survey.

In the poll conducted with 66 oil industry executives, market traders and analysts, one week ahead of a critical Opec and non-Opec meeting in the Austrian capital, Vienna, 46 of those polled said they expected the world’s biggest oil exporters to raise output in the third and fourth quarters of 2018.

“Let’s face it, it seems like Opec’s policy will more than likely change come June 22 — 18 months of hard graft and quite frankly, astounding compliance by all members has done its job and flat price is up at a dizzying height of $76 per barrel,” said Dubai-based Matt Stanley, Fuel Oil Broker, Freight Investor Service.

Opec and its allies had accomplish­ed their mission of reducing global oil stocks to desired levels, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) reported in April, signalling that the market could become too tight if supply remained restrained. The IEA, which coordinate­s the energy policies of industrial­ised nations, said stocks in developed countries fell to their five-year average — a metric used by Opec to measure the success of the output cuts.

Opec spent the past few years attempting to push up the price of oil following its collapse in 2014 when the price plunged from more than $115 a barrel to hit a low below $30 a barrel in early 2016. That was a result of an increase in supply from Russia, Venezuela and other Opec nations desperate for cash and an important new arrival on the scene — fracking firms in the US, which had begun pumping huge quantities of oil and gas.

The low oil prices finally propelled the world’s biggest oil exporters, led by Russia and Saudi Arabia, into a year of shuttle diplomacy that saw 24 countries signing on to the supply cut agreement in December 2016 to remove 1.8 million barrels a day from the market.

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