Crude oil supply from member countries of the
Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) sank to a four-year low in
March, a Reuters survey stated, as top exporter Saudi Arabia over-delivered on
the group’s supply-cutting pact while production from Venezuela fell further
due to sanctions and power outages.
The Reuters’ survey on Monday indicated that the
14-member cartel pumped 30.40 million barrels per day (mbd) of oil last month -
March, down by 280,000bd from what they produced in February.
The survey which the media got in Abuja also stated
that the output level was the lowest OPEC total since 2015.
It further suggested that Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies
were pressing ahead with even larger supply cuts than was called for by OPEC’s
latest deal, shrugging off pressure from US President Donald Trump to increase
supply. On Thursday, Trump again called for OPEC to pump more oil to lower
prices.
The Reuters’ survey also said that crude oil was
trading above $68 a barrel, close to a 2019 high. It added that this was
boosted by the Saudi move and involuntary supply curbs in Venezuela and Iran,
which are both under U.S. sanctions.
“The will is there to bring global oil inventories
lower,” the Reuters quoted Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM to have said,
referring to OPEC strategy.
Varga further stated: “Unless there is a sudden jump
in OPEC production or a complete break-down in the U.S.-China trade talks, financial
investors will find oil attractive to pour more money into.”
Accordingly, OPEC, Russia and other non-members in an
alliance known as OPEC+, agreed in December 2018, to reduce supply by 1.2
million bpd starting from January 2019. OPEC’s share of the cut is 800,000bpd,
to be delivered by 11 members except Iran, Libya and Venezuela.
The survey indicated that in March, the 11 OPEC
members bound by the new agreement achieved 135 per cent of pledged cuts, up
from 101 per cent achieved in February and a high rate by OPEC standards.
It stated that among the exempted producers,
Venezuelan supply fell by 150,000bpd as power cuts hit its exports, adding to
the impact of U.S. sanctions on state oil company, PDVSA and a long-term
decline in production.
It added that the latest OPEC+ deal came just months
after the group agreed to pump more oil, which in turn partially unwound their
original supply-limiting accord that took effect in 2017.
According to it, the biggest drop in supply came from
Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s biggest producer, which pumped 220,000bpd less than in
February.
The survey showed that Saudi Arabia reduced production
from a record 11mbd in November due to concern about a potential glut, adding
that the second-biggest drop occurred in Venezuela which Washington imposed
sanctions on state oil firm PDVSA in January, and blackouts halted operations
at the country’s main oil export terminal of Jose and at crude upgrading
plants.
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