"We are of the view that the market in the fourth quarter could
be shifting towards an oversupply situation as evidenced by
rising inventories over the past few weeks," Saudi OPEC governor
Adeeb Al-Aama told Reuters on Thursday.
"So we want to be watchful not to over-correct and cause a
substantial inventory build," Al-Aama, who heads a joint OPEC
and non-OPEC committee which monitors compliance and market
fundamentals, said after a recent meeting of the panel, known as
the JTC, in Vienna.
He reiterated that it does not push oil to the market but
responds to its customers' needs and said the increase in the
kingdom's oil production over the past months was in response to
rising demand adding that "this is not in any way a push from
our side, but rather a response to a market pull."
"Saudi Arabia produces only what its customers ask for, not
more. We saw strong demand for our crudes in the third quarter
and we have increased our production accordingly," he said.
"We think that demand will start dropping off as we approach
year-end in accordance with regular seasonal patterns. We have
the flexibility to adjust our production to mirror it."
The OPEC governor is typically one of the most senior posts in a
country's OPEC delegation after the energy minister.
(Editing by David Evans)
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