The
14-member Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has
pumped 30.98 million barrels per day (bpd) this month, the
survey showed on Thursday, down 890,000 bpd from December and
the largest month-on-month drop since January 2017.
The survey suggests that Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies
over-delivered on pledged supply curbs to avert the possibility
of a new glut building up this year. A formal accord by OPEC and
its allies to cut supply in 2019 took effect on Jan. 1.
Crude oil has risen to $62 a barrel after a dip below $50 in
December, boosted by the Saudi move, a host of involuntary curbs
in other OPEC countries and the prospect of lower supply from
Venezuela after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed sanctions on
its oil industry.
OPEC, Russia and other non-members -- an alliance known as OPEC+
-- agreed in December to reduce supply by 1.2 million bpd from
Jan. 1. OPEC's share of the cut is 800,000 bpd, to be delivered
by 11 members -- all except Iran, Libya and Venezuela.
In January the 11 OPEC members bound by the new supply-limiting
agreement achieved 70 percent of the pledged cuts, the survey
found. Further declines in Iran, Libya and Venezuela boosted the
total OPEC decline to 890,000 bpd.
The latest OPEC+ deal came months after they had agreed to pump
more oil, which in turn partially unwound the original
supply-limiting accord that took effect in 2017.
The Reuters survey aims to track supply to the market and is
based on shipping data provided by external sources, Refinitiv
Eikon flows data and information provided by sources at oil
companies, OPEC and consulting firms.
(Additional reporting by Ahmad Ghaddar and Rania El Gamal;
Editing by David Goodman)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|