VIENNA–Up to this week, chances that OPEC countries would agree to their first cut in output in eight years were looking good. Now, not so much.
Saudi Arabia is questioning the informal agreement made in September. And the desert kingdom, which accounts for about a third of OPEC's output, normally prevails at ministerial meetings. The price of crude was down on Tuesday, reflecting investors' caution about a final agreement being reached.
Still, a deal is not out of the question, and even a remote possibility that it will be backed is an exciting prospect. Spencer Welch, an analyst with IHS energy, casts the event as "potentially the most important OPEC meeting since 1973," when the cartel imposed a highly effective oil embargo on the West.
Those days of OPEC unity have been replaced by infighting and rivalries that have tarnished the cartel's image and crippled its ability to set world prices and supplies.
Instead of cutbacks, Saudi oil minister Khalid Al-Falih says the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries should do no more than what it has done for nearly a decade–sit back and let demand drive up prices "without an intervention from OPEC."
He told reporters that the Vienna meeting is wide open, declaring: "We don't have a single path, which is to cut production."
The Saudi stance raises chances not only of yet another inconclusive meeting. It also refocuses the spotlight on the battle for influence between the Saudis and Iran.
Once second only to Saudi Arabia in production within OPEC, Iran chafed for years under sanctions that crimped its oil sales while watching its rival increase its output. With sanctions lifted this year as a result of a nuclear agreement, Iran is looking to regain its market share within OPEC while pushing the Saudis to give up gains it says were made while Tehran was sanctioned.
Al-Falih may be hoping that his apparent about-turn on output cuts will pressure Iran and other members to be more open to reducing their own production instead of waiting for the Saudis to go it alone. And at least one important member appears to be listening.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi told The Associated Press that his country is ready to pare back output as part of an overall OPEC decrease of 900,000 to 1.2 million barrels per day. That would be cut of between 2.7 per cent and 3.6 per cent from October levels.
But Tehran insists the onus is on the Saudis. Alluding to its Mideast rival, Iranian oil minister Bijan Zanganeh said Monday that OPEC members that had increased production "dramatically ... should naturally accept more responsibility for decreasing production."
Even a full OPEC cut will not restore crude prices to the levels over US$100 that a barrel fetched in June of 2014, before increased output from the US and other non-OPEC countries led to oversupply.
OPEC then opted to pump at high volumes instead of throttling production, in an attempt to maintain market share and drive US shale oil and gas producers with higher operating costs, out of business.
Crude prices plunged as a result. In January, they fell below US$30 a barrel for the first time in over a decade before rising to levels now that are still less than half of their mid-2014 peak. On Tuesday, the US benchmark fell US$1.85, or 3.9 per cent, to US$45.23 a barrel. (AP)