The Sunday Guardian

OIL PRICES FALL MOST IN 2 YEARS AS UAE SUPPORTS OUTPUT HIKE

- CORRESPOND­ENT WASHINGTON

Global oil prices fell on Wednesday by the most in nearly two years after OPEC member the United Arab Emirates said it supported pumping more oilinto a market roiled by supply disruption­s due to sanctions on Russia after it invaded Ukraine.

Brent crude futures settled down $16.84, or 13.2%, at $111.14 a barrel, their biggest one-day decline since April 21, 2020. U.S. crude futures ended down $15.44, or 12.5%, at $108.70, their biggest daily decline since November.

“We favor production increases and will be encouragin­g OPEC to consider higher production levels,” Ambassador Yousuf Al Otaiba said in a statement tweeted by the UAE Embassy in Washington.

The UAE and neighbour Saudi Arabia are among the few members of the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries with spare capacity that could increase output.

The United States has called on oil producers worldwide to increase production if they can.

“In this moment of crisis we need more supply,” U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm told attendees at an industry event in Houston.

“Right now we need oil and gas production to rise to meet current demand.”

Additional supply from OPEC could compensate for some supply shortfalls created by disruption to Russia’s oil sales by economic sanctions imposed by the United States and other government­s. ”That (potential output hike) is not nothing. They (UAE) can probably bring about 800,000 barrels to the market very quickly, even immediatel­y, bringing us one-seventh of the way there in replacing Russian supply,” said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho.

OPEC’S language shifted this week when its Secretary

General Mohammed Barkindo said supply is increasing­ly lagging behind demand. read more

Just a week ago, the group and its allies, known as OPEC+, blamed surging prices on geopolitic­s rather than any lack of supply and decided against increasing output any faster. OPEC+, which includes Russia, has been targeting an increase in output of 400,000 barrels per day every month, and had resisted demands from the United States and other consuming countries to pump more. Russia is the world’s top exporter of crude and fuel, shipping around 7 million bpd or 7% of global supplies. Oil prices had already fallen during the session after the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said crude reserves could be tapped further.

“If there’s a need, if our government­s decide so, we can bring more oil to the markets, as one part of the response,” said IEA chief Faith Birol.

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