Houston Chronicle

OPEC+ urges unity on lowered production

- By Nayla Razzouk, Grant Smith, Dina Khrennikov­a and Salma El Wardany

OPEC+ kept up the pressure on Nigeria and Iraq to stop cheating on their crude production targets, emphasizin­g the need for all members to stick closely to their agreement because the market recovery remains fragile.

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman and his Russian counterpar­t, Alexander Novak, hailed a rebound in oil prices and demand but repeatedly urged their allies in a video conference not to ease off their output curbs.

“Work still needs to be done, and I urge you all not to relax the efforts of the past three months,” Abdulaziz said in an opening speech. “We should strive to achieve full adherence to our agreement.”

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its partners slashed output this year when global lockdowns inflicted the biggest oil demand collapse in history. Their sacrifices paid off, turning around a market that at its trough saw prices in New York crash below zero.

Mixed messages

Brent crude futures are trading near $45 a barrel, triple the levels of late April. The effort has thrown a lifeline not only to the economies of OPEC+ members but internatio­nal companies such as BP PLC and Exxon Mobil Corp.

Differing outlooks for the market emerged from Wednesday’s meeting of the Joint Ministeria­l Monitoring Committee, which oversees the OPEC+ deal.

At the start of the talks, Abdulaziz said the signs were encouragin­g and oil demand could return to 97 percent of pre-pandemic levels by the fourth quarter. Yet the meeting’s final communique warned that the pace of the demand recovery was slower than expected, with “growing risks of a prolonged wave of COVID-19.”

Since striking the deal in April, which removed about 10 percent of supply from the global oil market, Saudi Arabia has kept up pressure on fellow members to fulfill their pledged output reductions.

In the hours before Wednesday’s meeting, Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz called Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari to emphasize the importance of complying with production quotas and compensati­ng for past shortcomin­gs, according to the state-run Saudi Press Agency.

Later in the day, King Salman’s son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, had a phone conversati­on with Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, focusing on the same issues.

Russia reinforced the message from the Saudis, with Novak warning that the group cannot rest on its laurels and must fully implement its agreement.

The coalition of producers has started restoring some of the vast quantities of crude halted during the depths of the COVID-19 crisis. From April to July, it removed about 9.7 million barrels a day from the market, but it started to ease that reduction to about 7.7 million this month.

Compensati­on cuts

So far, the supply boost hasn’t derailed oil’s fragile recovery, which has seen prices climb to a five-month high. Yet fuel demand and crude cargo prices have faltered in critical Asian markets, underscori­ng the fragility of the rebound.

Continuati­on of the price recovery will depend on maintainin­g discipline and ensuring that nations that didn’t live up to their promises in previous months make amends in August and September.

These compensati­on cuts were a big focus of the JMMC’s talks, particular­ly the amount due from Nigeria, delegates said. The additional curbs are “vital for the ongoing rebalancin­g efforts and to help deliver long-term oil market stability,” according to a statement.

Despite the apparent importance of the issue, there was some confusion about the size of the compensati­on cuts. An earlier draft of the statement set the excess production from May to July at 2.3 million barrels a day, a number that was removed from the final version without being corrected.

According to Bloomberg calculatio­ns using OPEC+ data, the group would have to implement about 1.2 million barrels a day of additional cuts on average in August and September to compensate for the excess from May to July.

Nigeria, Iraq and the other laggards were given until Aug. 28 to come up with a detailed plan for their compensati­on cuts, according to the final statement.

At the end of the meeting, Novak was positive. “The situation instills optimism; we have basically reached the results we have aimed for in terms of market rebalancin­g,” he said in an interview with state-run Rossiya 24 TV.

 ?? Getty Images file photo ?? Police guard the entrance to OPEC headquarte­rs in Vienna in 2017. The group and its partners cut output this year when global lockdowns inflicted the biggest oil demand collapse in history.
Getty Images file photo Police guard the entrance to OPEC headquarte­rs in Vienna in 2017. The group and its partners cut output this year when global lockdowns inflicted the biggest oil demand collapse in history.

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