BusinessMirror

The historic oil price truce won’t last

- By Julian Lee

AFTER four days of high drama, low farce and long periods of tedium, the Opec+ group of countries, led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, finally agreed to a record cut in their oil production in response to the coronaviru­s-triggered collapse in demand. But the deal will come under pressure when the world becomes a more normal place again.

The drama was provided by Mexico refusing to accept its allotted cut. The farce followed when the country’s oil minister left the virtual Opec+ meeting to hold separate talks with her

US and Canadian counterpar­ts, while the other energy ministers agonized for hours, and then for days, over how to respond. The tedium? Well, that was just the bits in between. Mexico was asked to cut 400,000 barrels a day of production in the first phase of an Opec+ deal that would run for an unpreceden­ted two years. It offered one-quarter of that, and from a slightly higher baseline than what was asked for.

An unlikely white knight appeared to ride to the group’s rescue on Friday in the form of US President Donald Trump. He proposed an arrangemen­t with Mexico’s President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (known as AMLO) in which 250,000 barrels a day of the

“market-driven” decline in US output would be rebranded as “Mexican.”

But don’t be fooled: That wouldn’t have taken a single additional barrel of oil off the market beyond those that would disappear anyway because of the Covid-19-prompted collapse in demand. eventually, after nearly four days of trying to persuade the Mexican government to budge, the Saudis and the Russians finally decided to cut their losses and swallow Mexico’s lack of genuine commitment. The alternativ­e would have been to allow the commodity markets to open on Monday morning with the group still in disarray and to risk another big price slump.

In fairness, the Opec+ deal is historical­ly grand in its scope, given the size of the cuts and their duration, although it’s questionab­le how much value there is in setting targets two years hence, when so much remains uncertain. The 20 producers taking part will initially cut output by 9.7 million barrels a day, with all but Mexico reducing production by 23 percent for two months—may and June. As it stands now, Mexico’s cuts will end with the first phase of the deal, when it will presumably have to leave the Opec+ group. The reduction for the remaining 19 countries will taper to 7.7 million barrels a day until the end of the year, and then to 5.8 million barrels for another 16 months, until April 2022. Don’t be surprised if the headline numbers published by Opec+ are even bigger than these. There has been some suggestion that the official figure could be closer to 12.5 million barrels a day, but that would be achieved by raising the starting production numbers for Saudi Arabia, the United Arab emirates and Kuwait, who have all boosted production this month, leaving their real targets unchanged. This is smoke and mirrors to try to make the cuts look even more substantia­l.

The deal raises some even bigger questions than Mexico. Russia, for example, is to cut its output by 2.5 million barrels a day over the next three weeks. Really? Igor Sechin, head of state-controlled oil company Rosneft, was a fierce critic of Russia’s modest contributi­on to previous reductions. I can imagine how he’ll react when he’s told his company has to cut output by almost 1 million barrels a day by May 1.

The contributi­on from Friday’s meeting of G-20 energy ministers— which followed Thursday’s marathon Opec+ call—was, to put it mildly, underwhelm­ing. India’s minister mentioned filling the country’s strategic oil reserve, but there were no concrete new offers from the group. With oil prices on the f loor, building up reserves makes sense anyway, and China and India have already started. But storage space is limited.

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