Saudi Arabia says new oil cuts show teamwork with Russia is strong
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[July 05, 2023] By
Ahmad Ghaddar, Alex Lawler and Shadia Nasralla
LONDON (Reuters) - Russia-Saudi oil cooperation is still going strong as
part of the OPEC+ alliance, which will do "whatever necessary" to
support the market, Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman
told a conference on Wednesday.
OPEC+, a group comprising the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries and allies including Russia which pumps around 40% of the
world's crude, has been cutting oil output since November in the face of
flagging prices.
Saudi Arabia and Russia, the world's biggest oil exporters, deepened oil
supply cuts on Monday in an effort to send prices higher.
Yet the move only briefly lifted the market. On Wednesday, benchmark
Brent futures were down more than 1% at $75.30 per barrel, lower than
the $80-$100 per barrel than most OPEC nations need to balance their
budgets.
OPEC says it does not have a price target and is seeking to have a
balanced oil market to meet the interests of both consumers and
producers.
The United States, the biggest oil producer outside OPEC+, has
repeatedly called on the group to boost production to help the global
economy and has criticised Saudi cooperation with Russia after Moscow's
invasion of Ukraine.
But Riyadh has repeatedly rebuffed U.S. calls and Prince Abdulaziz said
on Wednesday that new joint oil output cuts agreed by Russia and Saudi
Arabia this week have again proven sceptics wrong.
"Part of what we have done (on Monday) with the help of our colleagues
from Russia was also to mitigate the cynical side of the spectators on
what is going on between Saudi and Russia on that specific matter,"
Prince Abdulaziz said.
"It is quite telling seeing us on Monday coming out with not only our
(oil cut) extension... but also with validation from the Russian side,"
he told a meeting of oil industry CEOs with ministers from OPEC and
allies, known as the OPEC International Seminar.
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Saudi Arabia's Minister of Energy Prince
Abdulaziz bin Salman Al-Saud arrives for an OPEC meeting in Vienna,
Austria, June 4, 2023. REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger/File Photo
OPEC has withheld media access to reporters from Reuters, Bloomberg
and the Wall Street Journal to cover the event, which was partly
broadcast online.
After the end of the broadcast, Prince Abdulaziz told the seminar
that OPEC+ would do "whatever necessary" to support the market,
according to a source who attended the meeting.
ENOUGH FOR NOW
Additional oil cuts should be enough to help balance the oil market,
United Arab Emirates' energy minister Suhail Al Mazrouei told
reporters on Wednesday.
"This (the latest addition output cuts) is enough to assess the
market and look at the market balance," Mazrouei told reporters.
He said the UAE would not be contributing to fresh cuts as it was
already producing well below its capacity.
"There’s a bigger thing… I’m seeing a lack of investments in many
countries. We will have to invite maybe newcomers to come and join
the group. The more countries we have... the easier the job... to
ensure that the world has enough oil in the future," Mazrouei said.
"Imagine if we had 60% of the producers or 80% of the producers...
We will definitely do a better job."
(Reporting by OPEC Newsroom; writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; editing
by Louise Heavens and Jason Neely)
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