"Asking Iran to freeze its oil production level is illogical ...
when Iran was under sanctions, some countries raised their output
and they caused the drop in oil prices." Iran's OPEC envoy, Mehdi
Asali, was quoted as saying by the Shargh daily newspaper.
"How can they expect Iran to cooperate now and pay the price?"
Venezuelan Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino, Iraqi Oil Minister Adel
Abdel Mahdi and Qatari Energy Minister Mohammad bin Saleh al-Sada
were to travel to Tehran for talks with their Iranian counterpart
Bijan Zanganeh on Wednesday in a bid to reach a deal to restrain
output and prop up sagging prices.
A spokesman for the Iranian ministry said the talks would begin at 2
p.m. (1030 GMT).
Under a proposal which could lead to the first global oil production
deal in 15 years, producers including Saudi Arabia and Russia would
freeze their output at January levels. But Saudi Arabia said on
Tuesday the deal depended on the cooperation of other big producers.
"We have repeatedly said that Iran will increase its crude output
until reaching the pre-sanctions production level," Asali was quoted
as saying.
Iran exported around 2.5 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude
before 2012. Sanctions cut that to around 1.1 million bpd. A Reuters
survey released on Jan. 5 showed Iranian production at 2.9 million
bpd in December.
The sanctions, imposed over Iran's disputed nuclear program, were
lifted last month after an agreement with world powers, allowing
Tehran to resume selling its oil freely in world markets.
SPECIAL TERMS
Two non-Iranian sources close to the OPEC discussions told Reuters
Iran might be offered special terms as part of an output freeze
deal.
"Iran is returning to the market and needs to be given a special
chance, but it also needs to make some calculations," said one
source.
[to top of second column] |
The sources did not elaborate on the special terms, which could be
anything from setting limited production increase levels for Iran to
linking future output rises to a recovery in oil prices.
The last global deal, involving OPEC and non-OPEC producers, dates
back to 2001, when Saudi Arabia persuaded Mexico, Norway and Russia
to contribute to production cuts, although Moscow never followed
through and raised exports instead.
The fact that output from Saudi Arabia and Russia is near record
highs complicates chances for any new agreement.
The price of benchmark Brent crude <LCOc1> rose as high as $35.55 a
barrel on Tuesday on hopes for a production deal, but it has since
dropped back to $32.15, showing many investors doubt an agreement
can be reached, that it would be respected, and would boost oil
prices much.
United Arab Emirates oil minister Suhail bin Mohammed al-Mazrouei
tweeted on Tuesday that the country's oil policy was open to
cooperation with all producers toward the mutual interest of market
stability. He did not elaborate.
Kuwait said late on Tuesday it was committed to an agreement to
freeze output provided other producers backed it.
(Writing by Andrew Torchia; Editing by David Holmes)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |