Arab News

KSA: All options open to OPEC+ as China virus weighs on price

Group will meet in Vienna in March to set policy, with the possibilit­y of further oil production cuts firmly on the table

- Reuters Dubai

Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Energy Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman Al-Saud said all options were open at an OPEC+ meeting in early March, including further cuts in oil production, Al Arabiya reported.

But he added it was too early to make a call on the need for more cuts.

“I can’t judge now if the market needs additional cuts because I haven’t seen the balances for January and February,” he said. He added that when the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting

Countries and its allies led by Russia convened for an emergency meeting in March, the grouping would study where the market is and “objectivel­y decide” if more cuts are needed.

OPEC+ agreed in December to widen supply cuts by 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 1.7 million bpd until the end of March.

Prince Abdul Aziz said the aim of OPEC+ was to reduce the size of the seasonal inventory build that takes place in the first half of the year. OPEC+ is due to meet in Vienna on March 5 and 6 to set their policy. A ministeria­l monitoring committee for the deal will meet in Vienna on March 4.

Oil slipped below $62 a barrel authoritie­s fear the infection rate could accelerate over the Lunar New Year holiday this weekend, when millions of Chinese travel. Global benchmark Brent is down almost 5 percent this week, its third consecutiv­e weekly drop. US crude was also on course for a weekly decline.

“One should be prepared for negative surprises when it comes to Chinese demand,” said Eugen Weinberg, analyst at Commerzban­k. “The impact of this is all the greater because the restrictio­ns are being imposed during the busiest travel season for the Chinese.”

China is the world’s secondlarg­est oil consumer so any slowdown in travel would show up on demand forecasts.

Offering some support for prices was the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion’s latest weekly supply report, which showed crude inventorie­s fell 405,000 barrels in the week to Jan. 17. Nonetheles­s, the upside for prices was limited. Oil inventorie­s in the wider industrial­ized world are above the five-year average according to OPEC figures, which analysts say is limiting the impact on prices of supply losses.

“Such is the bearish pressure that a raft of ongoing crude supply outages are not gaining much traction,” said analysts at JBC Energy in a report.

FASTFACT

 ?? Reuters ?? Saudi Arabia’s minister of energy, Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman Al-Saud, pictured here at the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerlan­d, warned it was too early for OPEC+ to make a decision on oil supply.
Reuters Saudi Arabia’s minister of energy, Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman Al-Saud, pictured here at the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerlan­d, warned it was too early for OPEC+ to make a decision on oil supply.

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