Featured Gas Oil

OPEC+ wants to maintain output cuts beyond June

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies want to maintain existing oil cuts beyond June to shore up prices and demand, four OPEC+ sources were quoted by Reuters as saying on Tuesday.

Global oil demand has slumped by about 30 per cent as the COVID-19 crisis has curtailed travel and economic activity, building up oil inventories globally.

Brent crude prices fell by 65.6 per cent in the first quarter, before the group agreed its deepest oil cuts.

Brent, against which Nigeria’s crude oil is priced, rose by $0.48 to $30.11 per barrel as of 7:32pm Nigerian time on Tuesday.

OPEC and its allies, led by Russia, who are known as OPEC+, agreed in April to cut output by 9.7 million barrels per day for May and June, a record reduction. While producers will slowly relax curbs after June, supply reductions will remain to April 2022.

“The ministers want to keep the same oil production cuts now which are about 10 million bpd, after June. They don’t want to reduce the size of the cuts. This is the basic scenario that’s being discussed now,” one OPEC+ source was quoted as saying.

OPEC+ meets next in early June to decide on its output policy. Under the deal, the exporting group is set to scale back the cuts to 7.7 million bpd from July until December.

A source familiar with Russia’s thinking did not rule out a rollover of the existing oil cuts beyond June, but added that “it will depend on a market situation”.

“We all look forward to getting back to some normality. It’s important that demand picks up again and soon. But demand will be down until the lockdowns are lifted,” another OPEC+ source said, in reference to restrictions to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed tens of thousands.

Saudi Arabia made a surprise announcement on Monday that it would voluntarily deepen oil output cuts from June by one million bpd, saying it wanted to expedite draining a global supply glut and rebalancing the oil market.

The United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have joined Saudi Arabia and pledged fresh cuts for their June output by a combined 180,000 bpd.

The rise in oil prices on Tuesday was boosted by the unexpected cut announcements by the Gulf producers.

 

Related posts

Unilorin increases fees by 35% – Management

Editor

UN envoy says Libyan oil “belongs to all Libyans”

Editor

Nigeria records 403 new COVID-19 cases, total now 16,085

Abisola THOMPSON 

UNGA: Nigeria signs bilateral Protocol of Cooperation with Bulgaria

Our Reporter

PHCN retirees call for FG’s intervention over unpaid pension entitlements

Meletus EZE 

LASG increases public gatherings to 50 persons

Meletus  EZE