Bangkok Post

New Opec chief vows to keep pact in place

Al-Ghais takes over in August

- ALEX LAWLER AHMED HAGAGY

The Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ secretary general-elect told Reuters on Monday that a top priority for him was to keep the group’s pact with Russia and other outside producers in place, saying it was in the wider interest of the oil industry.

Opec on Monday agreed to appoint Haitham alGhais, a former Kuwaiti governor to the intergover­nmental organisati­on, as its new secretary general, to succeed Nigeria’s Mohammad Barkindo, who has held the position since 2016.

Al-Ghais will take over the role on Aug 1 after the second of Barkindo’s two three-year terms ends.

The Opec+ alliance between Opec and other oil producers, called the Declaratio­n of Cooperatio­n (DoC), has helped to support the global market since 2017 when it was set up. Oil prices have recovered, in part because of record Opec+ output cuts agreed in April 2020 as the pandemic hit demand.

“That’s one of my top priorities — to support the continuati­on of this Declaratio­n of Cooperatio­n,” alGhais told Reuters, asked if he supported keeping the pact into 2023. “It’s in the wider interest of the industry and all the 23 countries that have signed up to this agreement.”

In line with the April 2020 pact, which Opec+ has agreed should say in place until the end of this year, the producers have been easing their output curbs. They are expected to confirm another increment to supply in February when they meet this week.

Al-Ghais, a veteran of Kuwait Petroleum Corp and Kuwait’s Opec governor from 2017 to June 2021, currently serves as deputy managing director for Internatio­nal Marketing at KPC.

He said he was “proud and humbled” by the support he received at the Opec meeting. “Everyone was so supportive and kind with their words.”

His appointmen­t, early into a meeting lasting about an hour, contrasts with previous protracted elections when several Opec countries had nominated candidates.

Al-Ghais said he brought a strong commitment to the role plus experience of Opec+ panels such as the Joint Technical Committee (JTC) and the Joint Ministeria­l Monitoring Committee (JMMC), which study the market and help the full group of Opec+ ministers to decide policy.

“My personal commitment and of course Kuwait’s commitment to the DoC is unwavering,” he said. “I have hands-on experience of what the JTC does, what the JMMC does. I’ve attended all these meetings since 2017, I haven’t missed a single meeting even when I had a broken leg.”

Al-Ghais also said his being brought up in a diplomatic family — his father was a Kuwaiti ambassador — gave him useful experience, as did working earlier in his career in Kuwait’s Foreign Ministry.

“It has given me a kind of flavour of how to act diplomatic­ally and how to bring diplomacy into the equation — that’s also another plus to the position and that will help me in this journey hopefully when I take over in August,” he said.

“One of the key roles of the secretary general is to be a diplomat. We have 13 member countries.”

 ?? ?? Al-Ghais: Proud and humbled
Al-Ghais: Proud and humbled

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