Arab News

Steady as she goes: Oil output stays on course

OPEC + alliance led by KSA and Russia will add 400,000 barrels a day to market from October

- Frank Kane Dubai

Oil producers opted on Wednesday to stay on course with output increases as the post-pandemic global economic recovery gathers pace.

OPEC+, the alliance led by Saudi Arabia and Russia, will add 400,000 barrels per day to the market from October, in line with the schedule to return output to pre-pandemic levels by the end of next year.

After a virtual meeting of ministers organized from Vienna, the 23-strong group said: “While the effects of the COVID-19 vinomic rus continue to cast some uncertaint­y, market fundamenta­ls have strengthen­ed and OECD stocks continue to fall as the recovery accelerate­s.”

Saudi Arabia, under Energy Minister Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman, has been the leading advocate of a long-term strategy to gradually rebalance global oil markets, resisting calls to put more barrels on the market.

The latest OPEC+ meeting also heard that overall compliance continued to run at a high level — around 110 percent — and called for compensati­on for past overproduc­tion to be completed by the end of this year.

There were other encouragin­g signals for the global market. US oil stocks fell by more than twice what had been expected as Americans took summer trips, and an OPEC analysis forecast a tightening oil market this year as economic activity resumed, though flipping into surplus supply in 2022.

Paul Young, Asia head of consultanc­y Quantum Commoditie­s Intelligen­ce, told Arab News: “It sends a strong signal that the OPEC+ group is confident in ecogrowth going forward after the oil demand wobble in August.

“OPEC+ will retain the flexibilit­y to adjust numbers if things change in the fourth quarter, but we should see the market looking toward 2022 policy now.”

‘It sends a strong signal that the OPEC+ group is confident in economic growth going forward after the oil demand wobble in August.’

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