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Thursday, July 3, 2025

Uncertainty over OPEC oil deal

by

20161130

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)


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