National Post (National Edition)
Bitter infighting stalls OPEC+ oil-supply deal.
The OPEC+ alliance fell into bitter infighting after a key member blocked a deal at the last minute, casting doubt on the group's ability to reach an agreement to ease a surge in oil prices.
The unexpected turn of events leaves consumers in limbo, unsure of whether OPEC+ will help to ease the inflationary pressures caused by tight oil supply. It also tarnishes the cartel's carefully reconstructed reputation, raising the spectre of the destructive Saudi-Russia price war that crashed the global crude market last year as the COVID-19 pandemic took hold.
Earlier on Thursday, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies appeared to have an agreement in principle to boost output by 400,000 barrels a day each month from August to December. The deal would also have extended the duration of the OPEC+ deal, setting the final expiry of the cuts in December 2022 instead of April.
That preliminary agreement was upended by the United Arab Emirates, which said it will block the deal until the baseline for its own cuts is raised considerably, delegates said.
The U.A.E.'s cuts are measured from a starting point in 2018, setting its maximum capacity at about 3.2 million barrels a day. Expansion projects have since raised that number and the country wants its baseline reset to about 3.8 million barrels a day, delegates said.
The U.A.E. argues that the change is necessary because, under the current terms of the OPEC+ deal, it is making proportionally deeper cuts than other members.
Yet, reflecting that new capacity in the country's baseline could allow it to pump hundreds of thousands of barrels a day of extra crude while technically remaining in compliance with its obligation to cut.
Russia and Saudi Arabia, the leaders of the group, angrily rejected the U.A.E.'s request, delegates said. Yet the baseline is a very significant issue for the emirates and it will reject the OPEC+ deal until there's a change, a delegate said after the meeting was adjourned.
Talks will resume on Friday, allowing time for consultations at higher levels of government, delegates said.
Crude futures traded near US$75 a barrel in New York, close to a two-year high. Oil has risen around 50 per cent this year, with the recovery in demand from the pandemic outpacing the revival of OPEC+ supplies after last year's deep cuts. Crude's surge, combined with a rally in other commodities, has central banks fretting about inflation again.
OPEC+ is already in the process of reviving crude supplies halted last year in the initial stages of the pandemic. The 23-nation coalition decided to add about 2 million barrels a day to the market from May to July, and the question before ministers on Thursday was whether to keep going in the coming months.
The market has experienced a supply deficit for much of this year as the group's output increases didn't keep pace with the demand recovery. In the cartel's view, that's been an entirely necessary remedy — the only way to deplete the vast surplus in fuel stockpiles that accumulated as economies went into lockdown.
Now, the group's data show oil inventories are back down to average levels as a strong revival in fuel consumption continues. Demand in the second half will be 5 million barrels a day higher than in the first six months of the year, OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo said on Tuesday.
Yet there are several factors that could undo the rally. If the U.S. reaches a nuclear deal with Iran, the end of sanctions could result in an influx of new supply. The highly infectious delta variant of COVID-19, which is already sending some countries back into partial lockdown and triggering a worrying rise in cases in other nations, threatens the demand recovery.
With these risks in mind, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has repeatedly urged OPEC+ to revive its idle capacity cautiously and gradually — an approach that could be thrown off course by a sudden production increase from one member.