Mindanao Times

OPEC, allies fail to reach deal on oil production cuts

- BENOÎT PELEGRIN Agence France-Presse

OPEC and its allies failed to reach a deal on oil production cuts

Friday, after Moscow refused to tighten supply to counter the effects of the coronaviru­s outbreak, sending oil prices tumbling.

The day before, OPEC ministers, led by Saudi Arabia, had recommende­d reducing output by 1.5 million barrels per day in the face of the global slowdown caused by the epidemic and the resulting fall in demand for oil.

But the decision hinged on agreement from the socalled OPEC+ grouping -- Russia, the world’s second largest oil producer, foremost among them.

Following hours of discussion­s, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said that the talks between OPEC and OPEC+ had failed to bring about a deal.

“Regarding cuts in production, given today’s decision, from April 1, no one -- neither OPEC countries nor OPEC+ countries -- are obliged to lower production,” he told reporters after the meeting.

Most other ministers, including Saudi Arabia’s, left the meeting at the Vienna-based headquarte­rs of the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries stone-faced without comments.

Oil prices, which have already tumbled to lows not seen since mid-2017 because of the coronaviru­s, fell further. As news of the “no deal” result reached the markets, Brent Crude fell 9% to $45.28 around 1630GMT, while US oil prices later fell 10.1% to end at $41.28.

“Today’s outcome is a psychologi­cal blow for the market, as the steep plunge in oil prices shows,” analyst Ann-Louise Hittle of Wood Mackenzie said.

- ‘Painful decision’ -

OPEC’s Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo said all parties had decided to adjourn the meeting -- “a general, painful decision” -- although consultati­ons would continue.

“We have some few knotty issues, but the norm is here to have everybody on board,” he told reporters.

“I believe that nobody in this group of countries would like us to relapse into the downturn that we went through 2014, 2015, 2016. They’re all conscious of that.”

According to the plan drawn up by OPEC Thursday, OPEC+ would have taken on 500,000 barrels of the cuts running until the end of 2020.

The 23 producers have since early 2017 tried to support prices through production cuts, initially of the order of 1.2 million barrels per day.

In December, with abundant supply weighing on prices, they announced a further 500,000 barrel cut with Saudi Arabia adding a “voluntary” contributi­on of 400,000 barrels.

- ‘Internal competitor’ -

Russian officials had been quoted in recent days as being much cooler on the idea of big additional production cuts, saying that current price levels are satisfacto­ry for Moscow and its budget planning.

The big players in Russia’s oil industry fear that an aggressive policy of output cuts will only lead to lost revenue and ceding market share to competitor­s, particular­ly the United States, the world’s number one oil producer, with its booming shale oil sector.

“The Russians can live with $40 a barrel oil and it seems they are willing to stomach even lower prices in the short-term to see the industry consolidat­e,” senior market analyst Edward Moya at the online broker Oanda said.

The Kpler energy analysis company on Thursday pointed out that Russia had increasing­ly been acting as “internal competitor” in the relatively new OPEC+ format, which itself has been thrown into question by Friday’s failure to reach consensus.

“In recent years, not only Russia has pledged fewer production cuts than Saudi Arabia... its compliance with the deal has also been minimal,” the company noted.

As well as grappling with the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s epidemic, delegation­s have been affected in a much more practical way at this meeting amidst more than 50 confirmed cases of the virus in Austria.

Delegates have had their temperatur­e tested on the way into the building and been advised to avoid handshakes.

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