Saudi sees no need to extend OPEC deal beyond six months

epa02373520 (FILE) A file photo dated 01 Junre 2009 of Iraqi workers at Tawke oil field in the town of Zakho, northern Iraq on 01 June 2009. Iraq has around 143 billion barrels of crude oil reserves, about 24 per cent more than previous estimates, the Iraqi Minister of Oil said on 04 October 2010. The reserves are mostly located in 66 oil fields in southern Iraq, Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani announced. This estimate places Iraq as the holder of the world?s fourth largest crude oil reserves, behind Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Canada. Previous estimates made in the 1990s placed oil reserves at 119 billion barrels.  EPA/KAMAL AKRAYI

 

Bloomberg

OPEC probably won’t need to extend a deal it reached with other crude producers to cut output, given the level of their compliance with the reductions and the outlook for an increase in global demand, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said.
The re-balancing of the oil market should take place by the end of
the first half of the year, Al-Falih told reporters during an energy event in the United Arab Emirates capital
of Abu Dhabi. Demand will pick up
in the summer, and OPEC wants
to make sure markets are well-supplied, he said.
“We don’t think it’s necessary, given the level of compliance we have seen and given the expectations of demand,” Al-Falih said Monday. “The re-balancing which started slowly in 2016 will have its full impact by the first half. Of course, there are many variables that can come into play between now and June, and at that time we will be able to reassess.”
Saudi Arabia is due to meet fellow members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in May at their bi-annual meeting in Vienna to assess the market and the group’s production policy. OPEC states will also gather with major producers outside the group later this month in the Austrian capital to monitor their compliance with the production cuts, which aim to reduce inventories and shore up prices. Benchmark Brent crude futures were trading 10 cents higher at $55.55 a barrel in London at 9:54 a.m.

AVOIDING SHORTAGE
OPEC’s decision on Nov. 30 to cut output reversed a two-year policy that let members pump all they wanted to try to maximize sales — a strategy that had contributed to a worldwide glut. The producer group, together with 11 other countries including Russia, is seeking to reduce supply by about 1.8 million barrels a day. The cuts took effect on Jan. 1 and are to last through June.
“All players have indicated their willingness to extend, if necessary,” Al-Falih said. “Based on my judgement today, I think it’s unlikely that we will need to continue. Demand is going to pick up in the summer, and we want to make sure the markets continue to be supplied well. We don’t want to create a shortage or a squeeze, so the extension will only happen if there’s a need, and if there’s a a need, we will do it. “
Saudi Arabia has cut production to less than 10 million barrels a day, below its targeted level, and is currently producing at a 22-month low, Al-Falih said Jan. 12 in Abu Dhabi. The world’s biggest oil exporter had agreed to trim output by 486,000 barrels a day to 10.058 million as part of the global accord on supply.
“We will strictly adhere to our commitment and be at our cap, or as is the case now, slightly below it,” Al-Falih said Monday.

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