Partial recovery in oil
production capacity in Nigeria and Libya is likely to set another record high in
October in OPEC’s oil output. The rise in output could add to scepticism about
OPEC’s ability to finalise a plan agreed in September to limit supplies, a
survey by Reuters said.
Oil, which
rallied to a 2016 high near $54 a barrel following the decision, has since
slipped towards $48.Supply from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries has risen to 33.82 million barrels per day (bpd) in October from a
revised 33.69 million bpd in September, according to the survey based on
shipping data and information from industry sources.
That would
be 820,000 bpd above the top end of a target output range OPEC agreed to adopt
at a September 28 meeting. According to analysts, production near 34 million
bpd would prolong the supply surplus weighing on the market.
“With OPEC production creeping up towards 34 million barrels a day, a production freeze guarantees that the oil market will remain out of balance throughout 2017 and into 2018,” oil broker PVM’s David Hufton said. Supply has risen since OPEC in 2014 dropped its historic role of fixing output to prop up prices as Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Iran pumped more. Production has also climbed due to the return of Indonesia in 2015 and Gabon in July as members. October’s supply from OPEC excluding Gabon and Indonesia, at 32.88 million bpd, is the highest in Reuters survey records starting in 1997.
In October,
the increase was led by Nigeria, Libya and Iraq. Supply in Nigeria, where
output had fallen due to militant attacks on oil installations, rose as exports
of Qua Iboe and Forcados crude resumed.
In Libya,
production has been hit by port shutdowns, strikes and protests since the fall
of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. Output has increased in recent weeks since the
reopening of some major terminals, but remains a fraction of the 2011 rate.
Iraq
exported more crude from its northern and southern ports, lifting supply to 4.58
million bpd in October from a revised 4.52 million bpd in September, according
to the survey. Iraq says its September production is higher.
Saudi Arabia
has kept supply steady to lower, but still within sight of the record high
reached in the summer, sources in the survey said. One source said there were
signs of a bigger drop in output.
Fellow Gulf
producers the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait both pumped slightly more. The
two say their production is higher than estimated by both the Reuters survey and
by the sources that OPEC uses to monitor its output. (Guardian)
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