OPEC to discuss output cut without Iran, Iraq ministers

epa04548401 (FILE) A file photo dated 22 November 1992 showing oil-pumping equipment standing abandoned at the oil well site near Surgut in Siberia, Russia. Global investors are worried by plummeting oil prices, which have fallen by about 50 per cent since the middle of the year as a result of a world-wide glut in oil and weak demand in the eurozone and China. The worries are reflected in rates of currencies and have also influenced global stock markets, with Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average plummeting three per cent and European shares posting further falls 06 January 2015 after US oil prices sank below the key 50-dollars-a-barrel mark.  EPA/VADIM RUSAKOV

 

Bloomberg

OPEC and Russia will meet in Doha
on Thursday for another round of talks without ministers from Iran
and Iraq, the two countries that pose the biggest obstacle to a deal to cut production.
Members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries are “all hands on deck” to reach an agreement by the group’s Nov. 30 meeting in Vienna, Secretary-General Mohammed Barkindo said in an interview in Marrakech, Morocco on Tuesday. Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran remain at odds over how to share output cuts, said
an OPEC delegate, who asked not to
be identified because the information isn’t public.
The latest round of diplomacy reflects OPEC’s struggle to finalize the deal reached in Algiers on Sept. 28, which would end a two-year policy of pumping without limits. More than 18 hours of talks last month in Vienna failed to overcome internal disagreements, which in turn prevented a wider pact with non-OPEC producers. Without an accord, the International Energy Agency predicted a fourth consecutive year of oversupply in 2017.
Brent crude rallied to a one-year high following the announcement of OPEC’s preliminary accord to reduce production, but has since fallen back
as doubts over the deal grow. The international benchmark rose 5.7 percent
to $46.95 a barrel Tuesday, the bigg-
est gain since the surprise agreem-
ent in Algiers, as the fresh talks prompted speculation the group can overcome its differences. Prices fell 1.2 percent to $46.37 at 11:53 a.m. in London on Wednesday.

OIL DIPLOMACY
“Freeze diplomacy continues in full swing,” Olivier Jakob, managing director of Zug, Switzerland-based consultant Petromatrix GmbH, said in a note Wednesday. “We think that Saudi Arabia wants to make sure that everything is done before the November 30th meeting.” Russia will hold informal consultations with representatives of some OPEC countries at the Gas Exporting Countries Forum in Doha on Nov. 17-18, the Energy Ministry in Moscow said in a statement Tuesday. Khalid Al-Falih, the minister of energy and industry for Saudi Arabia, which is not a member of the gas group, will join the talks, said an OPEC delegate who asked not to be identified because the information isn’t public.
Neither Iran nor Iraq will send oil ministers to Doha. Hamed Al-Zobaie, Iraq’s deputy minister for natural
gas affairs, will represent the country, Oil Ministry Spokesman Asim Jihad said by phone. Iran’s OPEC Governor Hossein Kazempour Ardebili and
National Representative Behrooz Baikalizadeh will attend the meeting, said an Oil Ministry official.
Iraq has sought an exemption from joining any production cuts, arguing that its fight against Islamic State justifies special treatment. Iran has insisted it won’t accept any limits on its production until it has returned to the pre-sanctions level of about 4 million barrels a day.
The talks in the Qatari capital run alongside behind-the-scenes diplomacy, including an unannounced meeting in recent days in London between Barkindo and Al-Falih. After traveling to Venezuela to meet with President Nicolas Maduro, OPEC’s top official will also visit Ecuador and Iran, two people familiar with the matter said Tuesday.

SAUDI REQUIREMENTS
OPEC pledged in Algiers to bring its production down to a range of 32.5 million to 33 million barrels a day, which compares with the group’s own output estimate of 33.6 million last month. The group is also seeking cooperation from Russia and other producers outside the group, although so far none have committed to curbing output.n Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s de-facto leader, is ready to cut production, but only if the effort is built around four pillars, said one delegate. All members must agree to collective action, pledge to share the burden of cuts equitably, and do so in a way that is transparent and has credibility with the market. The latter can be achieved by using OPEC estimates of how much each member pumps, rather than relying on the countries’ own figures, the delegate said.
In practice, that means Saudi Arabia still thinks Iraq needs to cut output and Iran has to freeze production around current levels, the person said. Neither country has so far agreed to do that. Three countries — Libya, Nigeria and Iran — have been granted “special considerations” to implement the Algiers accord, Barkindo said. Iraq is not among these members, he said.
In Libya and Nigeria, production is still recovering after a spate of violence and militant attacks targeted oil infrastructure. Iran has insisted it won’t accept any limits on its production until it has returned to the pre-sanctions level of about 4 million barrels a day.
Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran are the largest producers within OPEC, accounting for about 55 percent of the group’s output, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

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