Big Spring Herald Weekend

Some OPEC+ members will cut the oil that they send to the world to try to boost prices

- By ELLEN KNICKMEYER and COURTNEY BONNELL

LONDON (AP) — The OPEC oil cartel led by Saudi Arabia and allied producers including Russia made another big swipe at propping up lagging crude prices Thursday, expanding some output cuts into next year and bringing upand-coming oil supplier Brazil into the fold.

Lower oil prices have been a good thing for U.S. drivers, who have been able to fill their gas tanks for less money in recent months. But it's bad news for OPEC+ countries whose oil income bolsters their economies and who have faced setbacks in pushing prices higher despite initial fears that the Israelhama­s war could affect oil flows. The OPEC+ oil ministers came out of an online meeting with more than 2 million barrels per day in voluntary cuts through the first three months of next year and declared that Brazil would join the bloc in January, bringing one of the world's fastest-growing oil producers into an alliance that is trying to rein in global supply.

However, sweeping cutbacks from OPEC+ and individual member countries since October 2022 have not made lasting changes to oil prices because of concerns about too much crude circulatin­g in a weakening global economy, which could weigh on the thirst for oil for travel and industry. The market even shrugged off the new move, though it amounts to roughly 2% of global supply. Jorge Leon, senior vice president of oil market research for Rystad Energy, called it a “bit of disappoint­ing meeting” for OPEC+ and a “bitterswee­t” one for Saudi Arabia in particular because it couldn't convince the whole group to commit to production cuts. The market also was let down, because it “was likely expecting a deal covering the first half of next year," he said.

Other energy experts saw the oil bloc's two-part solution for a lagging market more positively. Paul Tossetti, an executive director of S&P Global Commodity Insights, praised the “imaginativ­e ways” of OPEC+ lately in dealing with market challenges from the Americas, climate change efforts and on other fronts. Taken together, the bloc's two moves Thursday serve to “preserve the unity of the group at a challengin­g time,” Bhushan Bahree, another executive director at the group, wrote.

Saudi Arabia led the deepening voluntary cuts Thursday, extending its reduction of 1 million barrels per day through March. It was followed by Russia, which is cutting 500,000 barrels per day of crude and refined oil products, and then Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman with smaller amounts. Russia wants higher oil prices to boost the main way it fills its war chest against Ukraine, while the Saudis have to earn nearly $86 per barrel to meet their planned spending goals, according to the latest estimate from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. Saudi Arabia is trying to fund an ambitious overhaul of the kingdom's economy, reduce its dependence on oil and create jobs for a young population.

But the internatio­nal benchmark Brent crude has stayed in the low- to mid$80 range in recent weeks and fell more than 2% to $80.91 a barrel following the meeting before settling at $82.83 Thursday. U.S. crude also dropped 2.5% to $75.90 before settling at $75.96 per barrel. The expanded cuts were expected to keep crude prices in the same range of $80 to $85 a barrel for the first half of the year, Leon said.

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