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Oil rises on Iran sanctions, lower U.S. fuel inventories

By Thompson ABISOLA

Oil prices rose on Thursday, extending gains on growing evidence of disruptions to crude supply from Iran and Venezuela and after a fall in U.S. crude inventories.

Benchmark Brent crude oil was up at 77.74 dollars. U.S. light crude was 40 cents higher at 69.91 dollars.

Iranian crude exports are likely to drop to a little more than 2 million barrels per day (bpd) in August, against a peak of 3.1 million bpd in April, as importers bow to American pressure to cut orders.

“The oil market is once again tightening,” said Giovanni Staunovo, analyst at Swiss bank UBS in Zurich.

“Iranian oil export declines are already visible well in advance of U.S. oil-related sanctions, which enter into force in November.”

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), where Iran is third-biggest producer, will discuss in December.

It will parley whether it can compensate for a sudden drop in Iranian supply after sanctions start in November, the head of Iraq’s state oil marketer SOMO, Alaa al-Yasiri, said on Wednesday.

Crude exports from crisis-struck OPEC member Venezuela have also fallen sharply, halving in recent years to about 1 million bpd.

Official U.S. oil inventory data on Wednesday also helped the bullish trend.

U.S. commercial crude inventories fell by a larger than expected 2.6 million barrels in the week to Aug. 24, to 405.79 million barrels, the Energy Information Administration said.

U.S. production was flat from the previous week’s record of 11 million bpd.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned of a tightening market towards the end of the year because of falling supply in countries such as Iran and Venezuela combined with strong demand, especially in Asia.

“Definitely there are some worries that oil markets can tighten towards the end of this year,” IEA Executive Director, Fatih Birol told the media on Wednesday.

BNP Paribas global oil strategist Harry Tchilinguirian highlighted a combination of supply risks.

“As Iranian oil exports are lost to the market, Venezuelan production continues to decline, Angola struggles to maintain output and Libya is subject to episodic outages,” he told the .media Global Oil Forum.

“The path of least resistance (for prices), at least in our view, is up.”

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