Times of Oman

Oil surges after 1.2mn bpd production cut agreement

The deal hammered out by the Opec and 10 other oil producing countries will take effect from January 1

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VIENNA: Opec members and 10 other oil producing nations, including Russia, agreed on Friday to cut output by 1.2 million barrels a day in a bid to reverse falls in prices in recent months.

Energy ministers reached the deal — which takes effect from January 1 but has already sent prices surging on oil markets — after two days of talks at Opec headquarte­rs in Vienna.

“Opec group countries are contributi­ng 800,000 barrels per day as a cut, and the nonOpec (countries) will be contributi­ng 400,000 barrels per day,” Emirati Oil Minister Suhail Mohamed Al Mazrouei said at a news conference.

Opec and its partners, which together account for around half of global output, met against the backdrop of a glut in the market which had led to oil prices falling by more than 30 per cent in two months.

Mazrouei said that three countries had been allowed exemptions from the agreement due to “special circumstan­ces”.

“Those countries are Iran and Venezuela because of the sanctions and Libya because of the fact that unfortunat­ely they are on and off,” he added, alluding to the impact on Libyan production of continuing conflict there. been “complex”.

The price of Brent crude, the European benchmark, surged 4.43 per cent on Friday to $62.7 as of 17:15GMT.

But some said Friday’s deal may not be enough to keep oil prices buoyant.

“I would describe the cuts as close but not close enough with regards to eliminatin­g the global oil glut,” said Stephen Brennock, oil expert at London brokerage PVM.

“A combined reduction of 1.5 mbpd was needed to avoid a supply surplus in the first half of next year,” he told AFP.

“Accordingl­y, the price outlook for the coming few months still remains skewed to the downside despite today’s knee-jerk reaction.”

The deal was announced after Novak held bilateral meetings with several counterpar­ts, including Iranian Energy Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh, before the full meeting.

However, the major players all had their own reasons to look to others to act first and the details of how any cuts will be shared out will be key.

Novak said that Russia, which leads the non-member countries in the so-called Opec+ alliance, would introduce cuts “gradually” to allow for “climatic and technical conditions” but aimed to reach the cuts target “in the next few months.

Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, had to bear in mind pressure from the United States after President Donald Trump demanded in a tweet on Wednesday that the boost output so as to lower prices and help the economy.

However, at Friday’s press conference Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al Falih sought to play down Trump’s influence on the decision, saying: “Over 2018 I have met with consumers in Asia more often than I have read tweets coming out of the White House.”

India had also asked for action to bring down high oil prices, he said.

 ?? – AFP ?? BALANCING ACT: The energy ministers reached the deal after two days of talks at the Opec headquarte­rs in the Ausytrian capital of Vienna.
– AFP BALANCING ACT: The energy ministers reached the deal after two days of talks at the Opec headquarte­rs in the Ausytrian capital of Vienna.

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