Bangkok Post

Opec+ resumes talks amid Saudi-UAE stand-off

-

VIENNA: Just hours before the resumption of talks, Opec+ still hadn’t resolved the increasing­ly bitter split between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates that’s blocking an oil-output deal.

The dispute leaves the global economy stranded in uncertaint­y — with little indication of whether the cartel will pump more crude to ease an inflationa­ry price surge, or allow crude to extend its rally above $75 a barrel.

In dueling TV interviews, energy ministers from the two Middle Eastern countries escalated an increasing­ly personal and unusually public fight. Behind the scenes, mediation attempts by other cartel members made little progress, delegates said, asking not to be named.

Riyadh painted its opponent as the sole obstacle to an output boost that had support from every other Opec+ member. Abu Dhabi continued to demand better terms for itself, arguing that the proposed agreement to extend quota limits to the end of 2022 was unfair.

The bitter clash has forced Opec+ to halt talks twice already, with the next meeting scheduled to start at 3 p.m. Vienna time yesterday.

Failure to reach a deal could leave existing Opec+ output limits in place, squeezing an already tight market and potentiall­y sending crude prices sharply higher.

But a more dramatic scenario is also in play — a full breakdown of Opec+ unity that risks a production free-for-all and could crash the market in a repeat of last year’s Saudi-Russia price war.

In an indication of the seriousnes­s of the diplomatic dispute, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman signaled the

UAE was isolated within the Opec+ alliance.

“It’s the whole group versus one country, which is sad to me but this is the reality,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on Sunday.

Prince Abdulaziz reiterated that the proposal backed by the rest of the group had to be passed, allowing for gradual production increases in the coming months plus the extension of the Opec+ accord from April to December 2022.

Hours earlier, his Emirati counterpar­t Suhail Al-Mazrouei had reiterated that the UAE would only agree to an extension of the deal if it was granted the same terms for calculatin­g its quota as the Saudis.

As an alternativ­e, Al-Mazrouei suggested the group could proceed with just a short-term increase.

“The UAE is for an unconditio­nal increase of production, which the market requires,” he told Bloomberg Television. “Yet the decision to extend the deal until the end of 2022 is unnecessar­y to be taken now.” Tensions between the two Gulf states emerged last year, when the UAE unsettled the cartel by floating the idea of leaving. It hasn’t repeated the threat again this week, but when asked if the UAE might quit, the Saudi prince only said: “I hope not.”

“The Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies are likely to find a compromise,’’ said Jeff Currie, global head of commoditie­s at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The group will probably approve the August to December supply increase without extending the duration of the Opec+ deal beyond April.

“The market environmen­t today is probably the best we’ve seen in decades, so it’s very unlikely you would see one of these parties jeopardize this opportunit­y right now by starting a price war,” Currie said in a Bloomberg TV interview.

Brent crude rose 0.3% to $76.38 a barrel as of 11.44 a.m. in London yesterday.

In absence of an agreement, according to Prince Abdulaziz, there’s a fallback deal in place — under which oil output doesn’t increase in August and the rest of the year, potentiall­y risking an inflationa­ry oil price spike.

Asked if they could hike production without the UAE on board, he said: “We cannot.”

Opec+ nations, oil traders and consultant­s were taken aback by the fight, and the apparent lack of communicat­ion between the two.

Prince Abdulaziz said he had not spoken to his counterpar­t in Abu Dhabi since Friday — even as he insisted he remained his friend.

“I haven’t heard from my friend Suhail,” he said, adding he was ready to talk. “If he calls me, why not?”

Asked if more senior officials had been in touch, he declined to comment.

The dispute goes beyond oil. The UAE’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, once enjoyed close relations with the Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman.

But the relationsh­ip between the two heirs appears to have cooled in recent months as Abu Dhabi flexes its muscles geopolitic­ally, asserting its own foreign policy from Israel to Yemen, independen­t of its old Saudi ally.

Saudi Arabia’s call this year for foreign companies to move their regional headquarte­rs to Riyadh was also seen as a direct threat to Dubai.

At the centre of the dispute is a word key to Opec+ output agreements: baselines. Each country measures its production cuts or increases against a baseline. The higher that number, the more a country will be allowed to pump.

The UAE says its current level, set at about 3.2 million barrels a day in April 2020, is too low, and says it should be 3.8 million when the deal is extended into 2022.

Saudi Arabia and Russia have rejected re-calculatin­g the output target for the UAE, fearing that everyone else in Opec+ would ask for the same treatment, potentiall­y unraveling the deal that took several weeks of negotiatio­ns, and the the help of US President Donald Trump as broker.

Prince Abdulaziz suggested that Abu Dhabi was cherry picking its new output target, and it would set a bad precedent.

In April 2020, Abu Dhabi accepted its current baseline, but it doesn’t want the straitjack­et to stay on for even longer. It has spent heavily to expand production capacity, attracting foreign companies too.

 ??  ?? Prince Abdulaziz: Fall-back deal
Prince Abdulaziz: Fall-back deal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand