Arab Times

OPEC, oil nations agree to nearly 10 million barrel cut amid ‘virus’

Kuwait Oil Minister lauds historic and greatest oil industry deal

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DUBAI, April 13, (Agencies): OPEC, Russia and other oil-producing nations on Sunday finalized an unpreceden­ted production cut of nearly 10 million barrels, or a tenth of global supply, in hopes of boosting crashing prices amid the coronaviru­s pandemic and a price war, officials said.

“This could be the largest reduction in production from OPEC for perhaps a decade, maybe longer,” said U.S. Energy Secretary Dan Brouillett­e, who credited President Donald Trump’s personal involvemen­t in getting dueling parties to the table and helping to end a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia.

Oil prices have collapsed as the coronaviru­s and the COVID-19 illness it causes have largely halted global travel and slowed down other energy-chugging sectors such as manufactur­ing. It has devastated the oil industry in the U.S., which now pumps more crude than any other country.

But some producers have been reluctant to ease supply. The cartel and other nations on Sunday agreed to allow Mexico to cut only 100,000 barrels a month, a sticking point for an accord initially reached Friday after a marathon video conference between 23 nations. The nations together agreed to cut 9.7 million barrels a day throughout May and June.

The group reached the deal just hours before Asian markets reopened Monday and as internatio­nal benchmark Brent crude traded at just over $31 a barrel and American shale producers struggle.

Video aired by the Saudi-owned satellite channel Al-Arabiya showed the moment that Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman, a son of King Salman, assented to the deal.

“I go with the consent, so I agree,” the prince said, chuckling, drawing a round of applause from those on the video call.

But it had not been smiles and laughs for weeks after the so-called OPEC+ group of OPEC members and other nations failed in March to reach an agreement on production cuts, sending prices tumbling. Saudi Arabia sharply criticized Russia days earlier over what it described as comments critical of the kingdom, which finds itself trying to appease Trump, a longtime OPEC critic.

Even U.S. senators had warned Saudi Arabia to find a way to boost prices as American shale firms face far-higher production costs. American troops had been deployed to the kingdom for the first time since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks over concerns of Iranian retaliatio­n amid regional tensions.

“They’ve spent over the last month waging war on American oil producers while we are defending theirs. This is not how friends treat friends,” said Sen. Kevin Cramer, a Republican from North Dakota, before the OPEC+ deal.

Reducing

U.S. producers have already been reducing output. The American Petroleum Institute lauded Sunday’s global pact, saying it will help get other nations’ state-owned oil production to follow the lead of U.S. producers that are trying to adjust to plunging demand.

Brouillett­e said the U.S. did not make commitment­s of its own production cuts, but was able to show the obvious - that plunging demand because of the pandemic is expected to slash U.S. oil production.

Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh also told state television that Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates would cut another 2 million barrels of oil a day between them atop the OPEC+ deal.

The three countries did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e the cut themselves, though Zanganeh attended the video conference.

Officials said other planned cuts would stand in the deal, meaning an 8 million barrel per day cut from July through the end of the year and a 6 million barrel cut for 16 months beginning in 2021.

“This will enable the rebalancin­g of the oil markets and the expected rebound of prices by $15 per barrel in the short term,” said a statement from Nigeria’s oil ministry.

Mexico had initially blocked the deal but its president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, had said Friday that he had agreed with Trump that the U.S. will compensate what Mexico cannot add to the proposed cuts.

“The big Oil Deal with OPEC Plus is done. This will save hundreds of thousands of energy jobs in the United States,” Trump said in a tweet. “I would like to thank and congratula­te President Putin of Russia and King Salman of Saudi Arabia.”

The Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin held a joint call with Trump and Saudi King Salman to express support of the deal. It also said Putin spoke separately with Trump about the oil market and other issues. Analysts offered cautious praise. “The pure size of the cut is unpreceden­ted, but, then again, so is the impact the coronaviru­s is having on demand,” said Mohammed Ghulam, an energy analyst at Raymond James.

But Ghulam and others worried it may not be enough.

“This is at least a temporary relief for the energy industry and for the global economy. This industry is too big to be let to fail and the alliance showed responsibi­lity with this agreement,” said Per Magnus Nysveen, the head of analysis at Rystad Energy. “Even though the production cuts are smaller than what the market needed and only postpone the stock building constraint­s problem, the worst is for now avoided.”

Kuwait Oil Minister Khaled Al-Fadhel confirmed that OPEC and non-OPEC oil producing states had worked out a deal to slash crude output by 10 million barrels per day in May and June.

The agreement is historic and the greatest in the oil history, said the minister in a statement to Kuwait Television, affirming that it had been endorsed by the stakeholde­rs in the sector.

Oil markets have been negatively affected by repercussi­ons of the coronaviru­s spread, where demand dropped, thus there must be a slash of the production and exportatio­n of the crude, he added.

Affirming that the oil producers were seeking to maintain a “certain price level and not a specific figure,” the minister underlined their approach to preserve markets’ stability.

Kuwait’s quota according to the OPEC plus agreement is based on the October 2018 output level, where the cut in its share will be in the range of 640,000 bpd in May and June, he added.

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