Kuwait Times

Riyadh to cut oil output as producers meet

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ABU DHABI: Saudi Arabia, the world’s top crude exporter, said yesterday it will cut oil output from next month, as major producers held a key meeting to discuss shoring up sliding prices. Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih announced the kingdom was cutting its supplies by 500,000 barrels per day from December. But Falih said ahead of the meeting of OPEC and non-OPEC key producers that there was not yet

consensus on a broader output cut.

Oil prices have shed a fifth of their value in just one month after surging to a fouryear high in early October, driven by a combinatio­n of factors centered on higher supply and fears of sluggish demand. The meeting of the Joint Ministeria­l Monitoring Committee in Abu Dhabi will not take decisions, ministers said, but will propose recommenda­tions for a crucial ministeria­l meeting in Vienna early in December.

Among those attending were Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak, Oman’s Oil Minister Mohammed Al-Rumhi and the energy minister of host UAE Suheil AlMazroue. Falih told reporters ahead of the meeting that Saudi Arabia’s “crude exports for December will be 500,000 bpd lower

than November”. The world’s top oil exporter has been pumping 10.7 million bpd since October, he said.

The Saudi minister acknowledg­ed that so far there was no fresh agreement on reducing production among OPEC and non-OPEC producers, who struck a deal in late 2016 to cut output by 1.8 million bpd to remedy an oversupply crisis. “There is no consensus yet among oil producers about cutting production,” Falih said at the gathering. He insisted it was “premature to talk about a specific action”, when asked about the possibilit­y of an output cut. “We have to study all the factors,” Falih said.

Brent crude dropped below $70 a barrel on Friday for the first time since April while the New York’s West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) sank below $60 a barrel, a nine-month low. In his speech at the start of the meeting Falih said the recent sharp drop in prices has “surprised us”. He said the market sentiment has shifted from one of fearing shortages to one worried about oversupply. He also attributed the sharp drop in prices to “microecono­mic uncertaint­ies”, and signs of a buildup in crude inventorie­s.

The UAE’s Mazrouei said that the goal of the OPEC

and non-OPEC cooperatio­n was to strike a balance in the market, adding that recommenda­tions for possible action will be made to next month’s ministeria­l conference. The latest price slump comes as the United States has upped production of shale oil, while Saudi Arabia, Russia and others have raised supplies of crude amid signs of slowing demand. There have also been signs of a softer-than-expected impact from US sanctions on Iranian oil exports.

“Prices have been falling amid a continued rise in crude supplies from big producers, such as Saudi Arabia, Russia and the US, more than compensati­ng for lost Iranian barrels,” Forex.com analyst Fawad Razaqzada told AFP. “With the Iranian sanctions not being as severe as initially feared, officials from the OPEC and non-OPEC producers may discuss at the weekend the need to bring compliance back down... or risk another 2014-style slide in prices.”

Producers implemente­d large cuts starting at the beginning of 2017 and managed to push up oil prices from below $30 a barrel to over $85 in October, strongly improving their revenues. But the producer nations eased the output cuts in June after signs of a tighter market and higher prices, allowing hundreds of thousands of extra barrels to hit the market. Commerzban­k, Germany’s second-largest lender, said Friday oil producers must act to prevent a free fall of prices. “If they fail to signal any intention to reverse the latest increase in production, oil prices threaten to slide further,” the bank said in a note. — AFP

 ??  ?? ABU DHABI: Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih (center), Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak (right) and OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo attend a meeting yesterday. — AFP
ABU DHABI: Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih (center), Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak (right) and OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo attend a meeting yesterday. — AFP

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