A Preview of OPEC+
Easwaran Kanason
Leading Change In How Energy Companies Learn & Reposition Into The Future. Award Winning SME Entrepreneur - E50
Despite disagreements leading up to the June 22 meeting of OPEC in Vienna, the cartel and its Russian-led allies agreed to a ‘substantial output boost.’ It presents a victory to Saudi Arabia and Russia, the twin giants that have been the leading proponents of a supply hike over the past month, as the alliance sought to reassure markets that any shortfall in OPEC production will be made up within their ranks.
The framing of the new deal also allays Iran and Iraq’s concerns over appeasing US President Donald Trump’s concerns that oil prices were too high by framing it as a ‘return to 100% compliance’ rather than an official output boost. In practice, this should mean that since countries like Venezuela (and to a lesser extent Angola, Libya and Algeria) have been producing far less than their production quota due to various forms of disruptions, boosting them back up to agreed levels would achieve a natural gain of some 1 million b/d. The original deal brokered in November 2016 was for a cut 1.8 mmb/d, but disruptions in those countries have deepened it to 2.8 mmb/d over the past three months. Though there seems to be some disagreements between the Iranian and Saudi Arabian oil ministers, it seems that the pro-rata quota reallocations were not going to be strict since ‘some countries…. are not going to be able to produce’, allowing players like Saudi Arabia to step in to fill the gap.
The figures being bandied about are a one million barrel per day increase across OPEC and NOPEC, and a specific increase of 200,000 b/d for Russia within that figure. Saudi Arabia said it would increase output by ‘hundreds of thousands of barrels’ but exact figures would be decided later, implying a looser approach to the details and a focus on achieving the supply boost first and foremost. But more interestingly beyond the deal is the long-term implications of a cooperation entering its second year.
Both Saudi Arabia and Russia have been pushing for the creation of a new body, bringing together the 24 members of the OPEC and the NOPEC alliance under what is being called the OPEC+ umbrella. This would bring in countries like Malaysia, Oman, Bahrain, Kazakhstan and Mexico into a formal alliance with OPEC. For Russia, this is a sign of increased clout – given that the new body is said to give more voting power to large producers. For Saudi Arabia, it dilutes the influence of its rival Iran in world oil supply management, which has scuppered many deals in the past. A suggestion by Russia in Vienna that a ‘crude output deal’ for 2019 was already being planned implies that the creation of OPEC+ might be sooner rather than later. Saudi Arabia is said to already have offered to host talks for OPEC+ at home. The new body could prove to be as effective as OPEC has in the past; or it could fizzle out the way the Russia-led Gas Exporting Countries Forum has. Either way, the next six months in oil should be very interesting.
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