Khaleej Times

OPEC CUTS NEAR VICTORY

IEA SEES OIL MARKET TIGHTENING AS VENEZUELAN OUTPUT COLLAPSES

- Dmitry Zhdannikov

LONDON — Global oil markets are tightening quickly on falling supply from Venezuela, which posted 2017’s biggest unplanned output fall and could see a further decline in 2018, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) said on Friday.

Debt and infrastruc­ture problems cut Venezuela’s December output to 1.61 million barrels per day (bpd), somewhere near a 30-year low. That helped oil prices top $70 per barrel in early January, their highest level in three years.

“The general perception that the market has been tightening is clearly the overriding factor and, within this overall picture, there is mounting concern about Venezuela’s production,” the IEA, which coordinate­s energy policy in industrial­ised nations, said in its monthly report.

“Given Venezuela’s astonishin­g debt and deteriorat­ing oil network, it is possible that declines this year will be even steeper... US financial sanctions are also making it tougher for Venezuela’s oil sector to operate,” the IEA said.

As a result of lower Venezuelan production, the IEA said Opec’s crude output in December fell to 32.23 million bpd, boosting the group’s compliance with a deal to curb output to 129 per cent.

December also saw production problems in the North Sea, which helped cut global December oil supply to 97.7 million bpd, down 405,000 bpd from November.

Opec agreed to lower production in

Talks this weekend could include mechanisms for gradually exiting the supply cuts after the deal concludes at the end of 2018 Alexander Novak, Russia’s Energy Minister

2017 and has agreed to maintain output cuts for the whole of 2018 to help bring oil stocks in OECD industrial­ised countries down to their five-year average.

The IEA said that if Opec and its non-Opec allies maintained good compliance with the output deal, oil markets would balance in 2018. It said stocks in industrial­ised countries posted an average fall of 600,000 bpd in the last three quarters of 2017, the largest since 1984 when it began collecting data, helped by record global refinery runs in the fourth quarter.

“Global crude oil markets saw an exceptiona­lly tight 4Q17,” the IEA said, adding that it saw a combined fall of one million bpd during that period on declining stocks in industrial­ised nations and a fall in Chinese balances.

The recovery in oil prices and a decline in global oil stocks has been helped by robust global demand growth in 2017 but it will slow down in 2018, the IEA said. It kept its oil demand growth estimate for 2018 unchanged at 1.3 million bpd, down from 1.6 million bpd in 2017, mainly due to the impact of higher oil prices and changing patterns of oil use in China.

Besides slowing demand, a spectacula­r rise in US output is expected to keep oil prices under pressure, the IEA said. — Reuters

 ?? KHALEEJ TIMES GRAPHIC • SOURCE: IEA ??
KHALEEJ TIMES GRAPHIC • SOURCE: IEA

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