Iran’s OPEC governor Hossein Kazempour Ardebili asked the
chairman of the OPEC board to include a sanctions debate in the
agenda for the June 22 talks, according to a copy of Kazempour's
letter dated June 2 and seen by Reuters.
Last month, Iranian oil minister Bijan Zanganeh asked OPEC to
support it against new U.S. sanctions and signaled Tehran
disagreed with Saudi Arabia's views on the possible need to
increase global oil supplies.
"I would like to ... seek OPEC’s support in accordance with
Article 2 of the OPEC Statute, which emphasizes safeguarding the
interests of member countries individually and collectively,"
Zanganeh wrote last month in a letter to his United Arab
Emirates counterpart, who holds the OPEC presidency in 2018.
U.S. President Donald Trump last month pulled out of an
international nuclear deal with Iran, announcing the “highest
level” of sanctions against the OPEC member. Iran is the
third-largest oil producer in the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries after Saudi Arabia and Iraq.
Oil ministers from OPEC will be meeting at the group's Vienna
headquarters to discuss output policy.
Kazempour, citing Zanganeh's letter, asked the board to include
in the June talks an agenda item titled “OPEC Ministerial
Conference support to the Member Countries that are under
illegal, unilateral and extraterritorial sanctions”.
The source said that after receiving Kazempour's request, the
UAE’s OPEC governor Ahmed al-Kaabi sought the advice of legal
counsel.
The counsel responded negatively to Iran’s plea, the source
said, on the grounds that the ministerial agenda could not be
amended because it had been finalised.
Earlier on Friday, Iran criticized a U.S. request that Saudi
Arabia pump more oil to cover a drop in Iranian exports and
predicted OPEC would not heed the appeal.
(Reporting by Rania El Gamal; Editing by Dale Hudson)
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