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OPEC recommends 1.5 million barrel output cut to allies

Friday’s meeting to reveal whether OPEC+ countries are prepared for such a large cut

By AFP - Mar 05,2020 - Last updated at Mar 05,2020

Kuwait's Oil Minister Khaled Al Fadhel arrives for the 178th OPEC meeting in Vienna, Austria, on Thursday (AFP photo)

VIENNA — Ministers from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) cartel on Thursday recommended a drastic production cut of 1.5 million barrels per day to their allies to counter a slump in demand.

However, it remains to be seen whether the OPEC+ states — Russia in particular — will be prepared to countenance such a large cut when they join the meeting of the OPEC on Friday.

OPEC members — led by the world's third-largest oil producer Saudi Arabia — agreed on Thursday to recommend "a further adjustment of 1.5 million barrels per day until 30 June 2020", a statement issued by the Vienna-based bloc said.

Countries in the OPEC+ grouping of the cartel's allies would be asked to take on 500,000 barrels of the cuts, the statement added.

Producers had already had to contend with abundant supplies weighing on prices — agreeing to 500,000-barrels-per-day production cuts at their last meeting in December — but the spread of COVID-19 across the world has sent prices plunging.

The European benchmark, Brent crude, sank to under $50 per barrel on Sunday, a level not breached since July 2017.

 

'Might not be enough' 

 

The success of the summit will above all hang on the alliance between Saudi Arabia and Russia, the most important players in the OPEC and OPEC+ groupings, respectively.

Russian President Vladimir Putin was quoted on Sunday as saying the current market price was "acceptable" and above the level foreseen in Russian economic planning.

Russia's RIA Novosti agency reported on Wednesday that Moscow's delegation was proposing an extension of the existing deal with no fresh cuts.

Ann-Louise Hittle, an analyst with Macro Oils, said she expected that Russia, world's number two producer after the United States, to agree with the cut "given their history of co-operation with OPEC".

Tamas Varga of PVM told AFP that even the recommended extra cuts "might not be enough", saying OPEC's new forecasts for a drop in global oil demand growth may turn out to be "overoptimistic". 

"I believe that oil prices will fail to recover significantly for the remainder of the year…," he said.

Some economists believe it is not impossible that the world economy could contract in the first quarter of the year, which implies lower demand for oil than OPEC has been forecasting, although activity is expected to bounce back once the crisis fades. 

Oil prices drifted lower after the announcement.

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