OPEC+ debates whether to raise or freeze oil output as price recovers
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[March 04, 2021]
By Rania El Gamal and Olesya Astakhova
DUBAI/MOSCOW (Reuters) - OPEC, Russia and
other oil producers meet on Thursday to decide whether to keep April
output steady or increase it as they weigh a recent price rally against
uncertainty about the economic recovery.
With oil above $60 a barrel, some analysts have predicted the OPEC+
group of producers will increase output by about 500,000 barrels per day
(bpd) and also expect Saudi Arabia to partially or fully end its
voluntary reduction of 1 million bpd.
But three OPEC+ sources said on Wednesday that some members of the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries believe OPEC and its
allies, a group known as OPEC+, should keep output unchanged.
They said it was not immediately clear whether Saudi Arabia would end
its voluntary cuts or extend them.
OPEC+, whose ministers starts a meeting at 1300 GMT, have to determine
whether an oil price surge from about $52 at the start of the year to
more than $67 in late February warrants a production hike or whether the
coronavirus crisis could deliver yet another blow to the global economy
and demand for fuel.
Russia has been insisting on raising output to avoid prices spiking any
further and lending support to shale oil output from the United States,
which is not part of OPEC+.
But in February Moscow failed to raise output, despite being allowed to
do so by OPEC+, because harsh winter weather hit its production at
mature fields.
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The OPEC logo pictured ahead of an informal meeting between members
of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in
Algiers, Algeria, September 28, 2016. REUTERS/Ramzi Boudina/File
Photo
JP Morgan cited Denis Deryushkin, Russia's representative on the
OPEC+ technical committee, as saying Moscow saw some rationale in
raising output because the oil market was in a 500,000 bpd deficit.
A source familiar with Russian thinking said Moscow wanted to raise
its output by 0.125 million bpd from April.
OPEC+ cut output by a record 9.7 million bpd last year as demand
collapsed due to the pandemic. As of March, it is still withholding
7.125 million bpd, about 7% of world demand. The voluntary Saudi cut
brings the total withheld to 8.125 million bpd.
Analysts from ING, MUFG and SEB all said on Thursday the market
could easily absorb an increase of 1.0 million-1.5 million bpd from
April and would need even more barrels in the second half of 2021
when economy recovers further from pandemic.
(Reporting by Rania El Gamal in Dubai, Ahmad Ghaddar and Alex
Lawler in London, Olesya Astakhova and Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow;
Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by David Goodman and Edmund
Blair)
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