Supply from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries is climbing after sanctions on Iran were lifted and an
initiative with Russia and other non-members to tackle a supply
glut by freezing output failed last month.
OPEC pumped 32.44 million barrels per day (bpd) in April, the
group said in a monthly report citing secondary sources, up
188,000 bpd from March. This is the highest since at least 2008,
according to a Reuters review of past OPEC reports.
"Fundamentally, oversupply still persists," OPEC said in the
report published on Friday. "Oil output remains high."
A persistent surplus could weigh on prices, which despite a
recovery to $47 a barrel from a 12-year low of $27.10 in
January, are less than half their level in mid-2014. OPEC's 2014
strategy shift to defend market share against higher-cost rival
output helped deepen the decline.
The price drop is hitting non-OPEC supply as companies have
delayed or canceled projects around the world. OPEC forecasts
supply from outside producers will decline by 740,000 bpd in
2016 led by the United States, little changed from last month.
OPEC repeated a warning that the non-OPEC supply outlook was
uncertain and cited factors that could lead to a bigger supply
drop, such as the impact of wildfires in Canada that have cut
production and project delays elsewhere.
But OPEC supply has been climbing since the 2014 policy shift
led by top two producers Saudi Arabia and Iraq. The return in
December 2015 of Indonesia as an OPEC member has also increased
total output.
So far this year, Iran is driving the growth. Tehran had refused
to join the supply freeze initiative and the deal fell apart on
April 17 in Doha after Saudi Arabia insisted Iran took part.
Saudi Arabia kept output flat according to the secondary sources
but based on its own submission to OPEC, Riyadh raised April
supply by 40,000 bpd to 10.26 million bpd.
OPEC left its forecast that world oil demand will rise by 1.20
million bpd this year unchanged. It sees demand for OPEC crude
averaging 31.49 million bpd in 2016, broadly unchanged from last
month's forecast.
The report points to a 950,000-bpd surplus on average in 2016 if
OPEC keeps pumping at April's rate, up from 790,000 bpd implied
in last month's report.
(Reporting by Alex Lawler; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|