Arab News

OPEC chief sees clear signs of oil rebalancin­g

Mohammed Barkindo says growth in US shale oil output has slowed

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LONDON: The oil market is rebalancin­g fast and has almost entirely erased the glut of refined products as OPEC sticks to its supply pact, OPEC’s secretary general said on Monday.

OPEC’s Mohammed Barkindo also said growth in US shale oil output had slowed compared to the first half of 2017 and growth in global demand may show further upward revisions, giving the supply cut effort tailwind.

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, Russia and other non-member producers are cutting output by about 1.8 million barrels per day (bpd) until next March to get rid of a price-sapping supply glut.

The aim of the OPEC-led cut is to trim the level of oil in Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) industrial­ized countries to the five-year average. OPEC and its allies agreed the deal last year after prices collapsed due to oversupply, hurting the income of producing countries.

“There is clear evidence that the market is rebalancin­g,” Barkindo said in a recorded speech provided for the Reuters Global Commoditie­s Summit taking place this week.

“The process of global destocking continues, both onshore and offshore with positive developmen­ts in recent months showing not only a quickening of the process but a massive drainage of oil tanks across all regions.”

Oil prices have gained support and in late September reached almost $60 a barrel, the highest in more than two years. But Brent crude, trading at $55 on Monday, is still half its level of mid-2014.

OPEC has said that OECD oil stocks, as of August, had fallen to 170 million barrels above the fiveyear average, down from 340 million barrels in January.

Barkindo said in the speech that 145 million barrels of the remaining 170 million-barrel surplus was crude, but inventorie­s of refined products were approachin­g the desired level.

“Just a mere 25 million barrels are products, almost converging with the five year average,” he said.

Barkindo said oil volumes in floating storage were also falling and Brent’s move into backwardat­ion, a market structure in which oil for prompt delivery costs more than future supply, made storing crude uneconomic.

“Crude in floating storage is down by an estimated 40 million barrels since the start of the year with help of a narrowing contango since June and then Brent flipping into a clear backwardat­ion from the second week of September,” he said.

“This trend will obviously make it unprofitab­le to continue to store crude.”

Oil demand has surprised forecaster­s to the upside. OPEC in its last monthly report raised its projection­s for oil consumptio­n this year and next, and this developmen­t could have further to run.

“These upward demand revisions are most likely to be an ongoing trend,” Barkindo said.

OPEC is also seeing a decline in growth in US shale oil output, whose increasing volumes helped bring about the slide in prices three years ago.

“We have recently seen a decelerati­on in US tight oil growth compared to the first half of the year, evidenced recently by falling productivi­ty of wells particular­ly in the Permian basin as well as growing concerns from the investment community,” Barkindo said.

OPEC and its allies are considerin­g extending the supply cutting deal beyond its March expiry. They hold their next policy-setting meeting on Nov. 30 in Vienna.

 ??  ?? Mohammed Barkindo said inventorie­s of refined products were approachin­g the desired level. (Reuters)
Mohammed Barkindo said inventorie­s of refined products were approachin­g the desired level. (Reuters)

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