Brent crude for September fell $1.13, or 1.5%,
to $74.42 a barrel by 1111 GMT while U.S. West Texas
Intermediate crude for August was at $73.39 a barrel, down
$1.17, or 1.6%.
Both benchmarks fell around 1% last week but are still not far
off highs last reached in October 2018.
The spread of coronavirus variants and unequal access to
vaccines threaten the global economic recovery, finance chiefs
of the G20 large economies warned on Saturday.
"Traders are now refocusing on the spread of the COVID-19
pandemic and global concerns over the new variants’ expansion
are weighing on prices, despite tightening oil supplies
globally," Rystad Energy analyst Louise Dickson said.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and their
allies, a group known as OPEC+, abandoned talks last week over
an output deal, which included pumping more oil from August,
after a dispute between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates about how to extend the pact.
Although failure to agree means less oil in the short term,
analysts say the collapse of talks raises the longer term
prospect of producers abandoning the deal and pumping at will.
"The market has been a bit negative as of late amid the growing
sense that the latest OPEC+ impasse could be a precursor to a
pump-and-grab scenario, meaning a lot more oil potentially gets
put on the market," said Stephen Brennock of oil broker PVM.
Saudi Arabia and Oman called on Monday for continued cooperation
between OPEC and allied producers.
Front-month WTI crude futures posted their sixth weekly gain
last week after a bullish report from the U.S. Energy
Information Administration showed U.S. crude and gasoline stocks
fell while gasoline demand reached its highest since 2019.
In response to higher oil prices, U.S. energy firms added oil
and natural gas rigs for a second week in a row, data from Baker
Hughes showed.
(Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Edmund Blair)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.

|
|