Kuwait Says OPEC May Decide on Extending Cuts in March 2018

LAGOS (Capital Markets in Africa) – OPEC and allied oil producers will keep reviewing options for their agreement to cut output, and a final decision on extending the deal beyond March could be postponed until the first quarter of 2018, Kuwait’s oil minister said.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will consider all its alternatives if the market doesn’t re-balance by the end of March when the cuts expire, Kuwait’s Oil Minister Issam Almarzooq said Wednesday at a joint news conference with his Venezuelan counterpart in Kuwait City. OPEC may meet in March to consider prolonging the cuts it pledged to make, along with major suppliers including Russia, in an effort to stem a global glut, he said.

“When we meet in November we will have five months to finish the deal, even then we may not be able to take a decision to extend the deal, so we might postpone the decision and hold an extraordinary meeting in March to decide,” Almarzooq said.

Producers are still not close to agreeing on what to do when the accord expires, Venezuela’s Oil Minister Eulogio del Pino said at the conference.

Global suppliers agreed in December to trim output by about 1.8 million barrels a day in a drive to stabilize the market and prop up prices, and they extended their six-month accord through the first quarter. Ministers from Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, the United Arab Emirates and Russia have said producers may consider prolonging the cuts further. Benchmark Brent crude has slid 3.7 percent this year and is currently trading near $55 a barrel.

Price Target
Ministers were aiming for oil prices to be at $60 or more a barrel when they first agreed last year to cut output, but crude is trading at $10 less than what they had expected, Del Pino said.

Kuwait and Venezuela are both on the joint ministerial monitoring committee, known as the JMMC, that reviews compliance with the agreed cuts. The committee will meet on Sept. 22 in Vienna, and Almarzooq and Del Pino said there will be no serious discussions of an extension then.

“The JMMC meeting next week is to review the agreement and not take any decision,” Del Pino said. “Speculators are trying to create an environment that we will be taking a decision next week.”

Almarzooq said the committee is currently considering six scenarios and may discuss a recommendation to ease production targets for countries that aren’t complying fully with the cuts accord. Ecuador announced in July that it won’t be able to meet its target because it needs to boost its revenue.

The drive to re-balance the market by pumping less crude is having some success, and it would be “appropriate” for producers to extend their cuts accord beyond March, Qatar’s minister of energy and industry, Mohammed Bin Saleh Al Sada, said Tuesday at a meeting with foreign diplomats in Doha.

Nigeria, which together with Libya is exempt from OPEC’s cuts deal due to internal strife, has agreed to join the agreement if it reaches and sustains crude production at 1.8 million barrels day, Kuwait’s Almarzooq said. 

Nigeria’s oil minister has assured that he will attend the next JMMC meeting, while Libya will send a senior official, probably the head of its national oil company, Almarzooq said.

Source: Bloomberg Business News

 

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