Khaleej Times

Aramco plans deepest cut to crude supplies

- Nayla Razzouk

dubai — Saudi Aramco plans to make “the deepest customer allocation cuts in its history” in oil supplies in November to help reduce global inventorie­s and balance the market.

State-run Saudi Arabian Oil Co, known as Aramco, will make an “unpreceden­ted” cut of 560,000 barrels a day in its allocation­s to customers next month, the Saudi energy ministry said in a statement. Aramco plans to supply 7.15 million barrels a day “despite very strong demand” that exceeds 7.7 million barrels a day, it said.

“Saudi Arabia is once again demonstrat­ing extraordin­ary leadership in its commitment to re-balancing the market, as we approach the upcoming key meeting of November 30 in Vienna, by restrainin­g not only the top-line of production volume, but even more importantl­y the bottom line of exports, which are what ultimately shape global inventorie­s and market balances,” the ministry said. “The kingdom expects all other participan­ts in the effort to follow suit and to maintain the high levels of overall conformity achieved in August going forward.”

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top crude exporter, is leading the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and other producers including Russia in paring output under a deal that helped propel oil into a bull market in September. Lower compliance with the curbs promised by some nations combined with rising production in Opec members Libya and Nigeria — both exempt from reducing output due to their internal strife — have added pressure on Saudi Arabia to make deeper cuts of its own. Brent, the global benchmark, erased earlier declines to trade marginally higher at $55.62 a barrel at 3:47 pm in London after the news of the Saudi oil allocation­s cuts. The decrease in allocation­s for November “constitute­s a full 290,000 barrels a day reduction over and above the 486,000 barrels a day” that Saudi Arabia pledged to cut as part of its commitment to the global output accord, the ministry said. This adds up “to a massive total of almost 800,000 barrels a day” in cuts, it said.

Saudi Arabia scaled back exports in September to less than 6.7 million barrels a day, “despite high customer demand and the partial reduction of domestic summer crude burning requiremen­ts,” the ministry said.

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 ?? — Reuters ?? saudi arabia is demonstrat­ing extraordin­ary leadership in re-balancing the oil market.
— Reuters saudi arabia is demonstrat­ing extraordin­ary leadership in re-balancing the oil market.

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