Business World

Oil falls as production rises ahead of 2017 output cut

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SINGAPORE — Oil prices fell by one percent on Monday as a higher US rig count unsettled markets amid nagging concern that output cuts, planned as part of concerted action between producer club OPEC and Russia, might not be as big as initially anticipate­d.

Brent crude futures were trading at $53.89 per barrel at 0132 GMT, down 57 cents, or over 1%, from their last close.

West Texas Intermedia­te ( WTI) crude futures were at $51.49 a barrel, down 52 cents, or one percent.

Traders said price falls were triggered by rising production just after last week’s accord between the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non- OPEC member Russia to cut output in 2017. The cuts aim to rein in a supply glut that has weighed on markets for over two years.

Meanwhile, US energy firms extended drilling for new oil production into a seventh month last week, data from energy services firm Baker Hughes showed on Friday.

“The US oil rig count continued its rally this week, up by 3 rigs... Since its trough on May 27, 2016, producers have added 161 oil rigs (+51%) in the US,” Goldman Sachs said.

Overall — accounting for the recent rise in oil drilling, but also for cutbacks earlier this year on low prices — Goldman said “yearon-year production will decline by 620,000 barrels per day ( bpd) in 2016 and increase by 55,000 bpd in 2017.”

With US production set to edge up, there are also gnawing concerns that the cuts announced last week by OPEC and Russia might not be as deep as initially anticipate­d. The planned reductions brought the sharpest weekly crude price rises in years.

Russia on Friday reported average daily oil production of 11.21 million bpd for November — its highest in almost 30 years. And while Moscow has agreed to cut its output by 300,000 bpd in early 2017, it said it would do so against November levels. That means that even after a reduction, its output would remain higher than it was at the peak of the oil glut in the first half of 2016.

In the Middle East, where the deepest OPEC production cuts are expected, there are also signs that production will rise before it gets cut.

Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are expected to agree this month to resume oil production, with a potential of 300,000 barrels in daily output, from jointly operated oil fields which were shut down between 2014 and 2015 for environmen­tal and technical difficulti­es. —

 ??  ?? Average (Dec. 1-2) $51.37 Average (Nov. 1-30) $45.76
Average (Dec. 1-2) $51.37 Average (Nov. 1-30) $45.76
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 ??  ?? Source: REUTERS
Source: REUTERS

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