The Mercury News

OPEC extends output cuts into 2020

Move shows challenge of controllin­g oil market in age of shale

- By Nayla Razzouk, Dina Khrennikov­a and Javier Blas Bloomberg News

OPEC will extend production cuts into 2020, attempting to buoy oil prices as the world’s leading exporters fret about the outlook for global demand growth and the relentless rise in output from America’s shale fields.

After more than 10 hours of meetings, ministers confirmed an agreement to extend existing production curbs for nine months. But the talks were marred by hours of wrangling between Iran and other members over a charter enshrining the OPEC+ alliance. Eventually, a compromise was reached.

Speaking at a press conference after the meeting ended, Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Khalid Al-Falih said commitment to the nine-month extension was ‘unequivoca­l.’

Originally envisioned as a short-term fix in 2017 to drain excess global stockpiles, the repeated decisions to keep rolling the cuts forward shows the challenge of controllin­g the oil market in the age of shale. While the strategy has succeeded in raising prices, the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ share of the global oil market has fallen to the lowest since 1991.

Oil gave up gains made earlier in the day as the OPEC meeting dragged on. As the meeting broke up crude oil futures traded 0.7% higher at $65.19 a barrel.

By pushing through an extension until March 2020, Saudi Arabia is seeking to avoid cliffhange­r meetings, when the group gathers only days — or even hours — before a round of curbs expire, according to a delegate briefed on the strategy. OPEC will meet before the end of the year, perhaps in December, giving the cartel a cushion of several months between its next meeting and the end of the agreement.

For Moscow, there’s an extra incentive to extend the curbs by nine months as Russian oil companies struggle to raise production over the winter. By extending the deal into 2020,

Russia could be in a better position to pump more during the spring of next year. The idea of a longer-thanexpect­ed extension was first mooted by President Vladimir Putin after he met Saudi Arabia’s crown prince at the G-20 summit in Japan on Saturday.

OPEC ministers meeting at the organizati­on’s secretaria­t also agreed to a second term for SecretaryG­eneral Mohammad Barkindo, whose three-year tenure comes up for renewal in August. The compromise charter for a longterm alliance with nonOPEC partners will now be returned to national government­s for ratificati­on.

Since OPEC joined forces in 2016 with other producers including Russia, Kazakhstan and Mexico, they have sought to establish an enduring basis for cooperatio­n. But Iran has voiced unhappines­s with the dominance that non-member Russia — not to mention regional rival Saudi Arabia —exert over OPEC policy. Soaring Shale

The decision to extend production curbs through next March comes as the Internatio­nal Energy Agency and other market watchers peg back forecasts for demand amid sluggish growth in China and India. At the same time, American shale production has set fresh records, putting the U.S. on the brink of becoming a net oil exporter.

“The oil market is getting excited about the cut extension, but OPEC appears more and more worried

about demand,” said Andrew Dodson, founder of commodity hedge fund Philipp Oil.

The current version of the OPEC+ deal calls for production curbs of 1.2 million barrels a day, though the alliance has cut more than it pledged as U.S. sanctions on Iran and Venezuela slashed output from both countries.

Saudi Arabia has also unilateral­ly made deeper curbs, pumping 9.73 million barrels a day in June, according to a Bloomberg survey of officials, analysts and ship-tracking data. That compares with its OPEC+ ceiling of 10.3 million.

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