OPEC Secretary General urges U.S. shale oil producers to
help cap global supply
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[October 10, 2017]
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - OPEC's
Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo on Tuesday called on U.S. shale oil
producers to help curtail global oil supply, warning extraordinary
measures might be needed next year to sustain the rebalanced market in
the medium to long term.
"We urge our friends, in the shale basins of North America to take this
shared responsibility with all seriousness it deserves, as one of the
key lessons learnt from the current unique supply-driven cycle," said
Barkindo.
The comments by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
official came during a speech delivered at the India Energy Forum
organized by CERAWeek in New Delhi.
"At the moment we (OPEC and independent U.S. producers) both agreed that
we have a shared responsibility in maintaining stability because they
are also not insulated from the impact of this downturn," Barkindo said,
referring to a slide in oil prices that spurred OPEC to agree production
cuts late last year.
"The call by independents themselves (is) that we need to continue this
interaction," he said.
While OPEC and some other producers, including Russia have cut supplies
this year in order to prop up prices, U.S. production has soared by
almost 10 percent this year, driven largely by shale drillers. Barkindo
said he hoped that new producers, not just U.S. shale drillers, would
join production cuts.
On Monday, Saudi Arabia cut crude oil allocations for November by
560,000 barrels per day (bpd), in line with the kingdom's commitment to
the supply reduction pact.
"Demand-supply is returning to rebalance through massive destocking that
we have been witnessing of stocks in OECD across regions in a very
massive way," Barkindo said later, speaking to reporters on the
sidelines of the conference.
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OPEC Secretary General Mohammed Barkindo speaks to the media during
his visit in Abuja, Nigeria Febuary 27, 2017. REUTERS/Afolabi
Sotunde
"In the past four months alone, we have seen destocking to the tune of 130
million bpd," he said.
The aim of the OPEC-led cut is to trim the level of oil in OECD industrialized
countries compared with the five-year supply average. Barkindo said the stock
overhang to the five-year average stood at 171 million barrels in August,
against 338 million at the start of the year.
"The speed and pace (of destocking) has accelerated as a result of anticipated
and projected demand growth in the second half of 2017 to the tune of 2 million
bpd. We are witnessing a fast return to a balanced market," Barkindo said.
Still, on Sunday Barkindo said OPEC and other oil producers might need to take
"some extraordinary measures" next year to rebalance the oil market.
World oil demand growth in 2017 is expected at 1.45 million barrels per day
(BPD) and it should stay around 1.4 million bpd in 2018, Barkindo said. He said
India's share of global oil demand is expected to rise to over 9 percent by
2040, up from 4 percent now.
(Reporting by Nidhi Verma, Promit Mukherjee and Neha Dasgupta; Editing by
Kenneth Maxwell)
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