THISDAY

Report: OPEC+ Added 610,000bpd to Oil Market in June

- Stories by Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja with agency report

The Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies OPEC+’s crude production rose by over 600,000 b/d last month as quotas increased and Saudi Arabia further unwound its additional cut.

Argus estimated that OPEC members, including those not participat­ing in the supply restraint pact, added 560,000 b/d to the market in June, with Riyadh accounting for the lion’s share.

Saudi Arabia brought back another 350,000 b/d of the extra 1million b/d cut that it implemente­d in February to April and plans to restore the remaining 400,000 b/d this month.

Exports failed to match production growth largely because rising temperatur­es boosted crude demand from the domestic power sector.

Angola saw the second-largest hike among OPEC members after hitting a 16-year low in May. The resumption of Gindungo flows drove a 70,000 b/d increase to 1.14mn b/d last month.

Angolan oil minister, Diamantino Azevedo, said he expects production to average 1.19mn b/d this year, below a previous forecast of 1.22mn b/d.

The revision was underpinne­d by delays in investment and drilling campaigns caused by last year’s Covid-induced collapse in oil prices as the country averaged 1.13 million b/d in the first six months of this year.

Iran and Venezuela, two of the three OPEC members exempt from the OPEC+ deal, both increased output while Iran’s went up by another 50,000 b/d to 2.44mn b/d as talks to revive the 2015 nuclear deal continued in Vienna. If the negotiatio­ns are successful, US sanctions on Tehran’s exports will be lifted.

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