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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Oil powers announce surprise cuts of more than 1 million bpd

    Major oil powers led by Saudi Arabia announced a surprise production cut of more than one million barrels per day on Sunday, calling it a “precautionary” move aimed at stabilising the market.


    The reductions, on top of a Russian decision to extend a cut of 500,000 barrels per day, and despite US calls to increase production, risk stoking inflation and pressure to raise interest rates.


    Cuts by Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the UAE, Kuwait, Algeria and Oman from May to the end of the year will top one million barrels per day — the biggest reduction since the OPEC+ cartel slashed two million barrels per day in October.


    Russia, a leading member of the OPEC+ cartel, said it was also extending an existing cut of 500,000 bpd to the end of this year, describing it as “a responsible and preventive action”.


    Oil prices soared almost six percent in Asian trade on Monday morning with West Texas Intermediate jumping by 5.74 percent to $80.01 a barrel and Brent climbing 5.67 percent to $84.42.


    A Saudi energy ministry official “emphasised that this is a precautionary measure aimed at supporting the stability of the oil market”, the official Saudi Press Agency said.


    The cuts follow a drop in oil prices triggered by jitters over the banking sector, following the collapse of US lender SVB and UBS’s hurried buy-out of troubled rival Credit Suisse, UAE-based oil expert Ibrahim al-Ghitani told AFP.


    Brent crude oil prices, trading just below $80 a barrel late last week, should bounce to above $80 as a result of the reductions, he said, calling prices below $80 “unacceptable” for OPEC+.


    “The producing countries adhere to a balancing level that supports their large financial budget this year, and their next economic plans,” al-Ghitani said.


    – ‘Recessionary pressures’ –


    The reductions follow a controversial decision in October by OPEC and its allies including Russia — collectively known as OPEC+ — to slash production by two million barrels per day.


    That cut, the biggest since the height of the Covid pandemic in 2020, also came despite concerns it would fuel further inflation and push central banks to hike interest rates.


    OPEC raised its 2023 world oil demand forecast in February, saying it expected demand to grow by 2.3 million barrels per day to an average of 101.87 million barrels per day this year.


    But “initial expectations of higher demand in the second half are now challenged by the prospects of continued high inflation and recessionary pressures”, said Gulf analyst Yesar al-Maleki.


    “OPEC is taking a pre-emptive measure in case demand reduction in the second half is possibly higher,” he told AFP.


    Saudi Arabia will cut 500,000 barrels per day, Iraq 211,000, the UAE 144,000, Kuwait 128,000, Algeria 48,000 and Oman 40,000, each country announced.


    The reductions ignore calls from the United States to raise production as consumption rises and as China, the world’s biggest oil consumer, reopens after its Covid shutdown.


    “As world economies recover, we’ll see more consumption. And therefore we’d like to see supply meet demand,” said Jose Fernandez, the US Undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs, Energy and the Environment, on the sidelines of the CERAWeek energy conference, in Houston, Texas, last month.


    On Monday, OPEC+ — the 13 members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and 11 non-OPEC allied countries — will hold a Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee meeting by video-link.


    US President Joe Biden has regularly called for an increase in the OPEC+ output since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine early last year sent prices soaring to above $120 a barrel.


    After the cut in October, which preceded US mid-term elections, he warned of “consequences” for Saudi Arabia, a long-standing ally.


    Oil powers announce surprise cuts of more than 1 million bpd | Thai PBS World : The latest Thai news in English, News Headlines, World News and News Broadcasts in both Thai and English. We bring Thailand to the world

  2. #2
    Thailand Expat
    dirk diggler's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by misskit View Post
    Saudi Arabia will cut 500,000 barrels per day, Iraq 211,000, the UAE 144,000, Kuwait 128,000, Algeria 48,000 and Oman 40,000, each country announced.
    They probably just can't find the manpower.

    The industry is booming right now and everyone's getting better day rates except me.

  3. #3
    hangin' around cyrille's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dirk diggler View Post
    They probably just can't find the manpower.
    They probably want to keep demand up.

    That seems to be overwhelmingly the most common prompt.

    It's a finite resource, and the moolah they're making on it at the moment they will want to see continued.

  4. #4
    Thailand Expat
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    Quote Originally Posted by dirk diggler View Post
    The industry is booming right now...
    Certainly is, especially offshore where drilling companies are locking in multi-year contracts for their rigs on massive dayrates lately.

    Now why would that be happening when oil and gas will be obsolete in the very near future?

  5. #5
    hangin' around cyrille's Avatar
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    Crude dropped sharply last month.

    They want to shore up demand.

    ^Very, very few people maintain oil and gas will be obsolete in the very near future.

    Quite possibly nobody at all, actually.

    Anyway, keep on bayoneting that stuffed enemy.

  6. #6
    Thailand Expat
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    ^Yeah I'm not discussing how an industry I've worked in since the age of 18 really works with a tefler but you'd be surprised what some people actually believe. That poster child of all things retarded when it comes to the climate (Greta Thunberg) recently deleted a post she made a few years ago saying the world would be wiped out of all humanity if we didn't stop using oil and gas by 2023, yet here we are which must come as quite the surprise to some. Fuck knows how many idiots actually believed her and her ilk and the bullshit they spew about anything to do with the O&G industry, but it would not be insignificant.

  7. #7
    last farang standing
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    I can see your view as an o and g worker and it certainly is true it will be used for at least the next 50 years in one form or another. MBS has probably realised he is on the nose in the west and has no reason to help the USA and more reason to side with his dictator mates. Certainly climate temperature is rising more slowly than predicted but that doesnt mean we should ease off, in fact rising prices give countries and climate activists more ammunition to cut emissions. When there are eventually drastic cuts to oil and gas use it will be interesting to see what happens to the USD.

  8. #8
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    Filling the NaGaStan strategic reserve will be costly.

  9. #9
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    The movers and shakers move a white pawn. When will the black king's strategy be revealed?

    APRIL 4, 2023

    BY M. K. BHADRAKUMAR

    OPEC: Saudis aren’t afraid of US anymore

    "The shock oil production cuts from May outlined by the OPEC+ on Sunday essentially means that eight key OPEC countries decided to join hands with Russia to reduce oil production, messaging that OPEC and OPEC+ are now back in control of the oil market.


    No single oil producing country is acting as the Pied Piper here. The great beauty about it is that Saudi Arabia and seven other major OPEC countries have unexpectedly decided to support Russia’s efforts and unilaterally reduce production.

    While the 8 OPEC countries are talking about a reduction of one million b/d from May to the end of the year, Russia will extend for the same period its voluntary adjustment that already started in March, by 500,000 barrels.

    Now, add to this the production adjustments already decided by the OPEC+ previously, and the total additional voluntary production adjustments touch a whopping 1.6 million b/d.

    What has led to this? Fundamentally, as many analysts had forewarned, the Western sanctions against Russian oil created distortions and anomalies in the oil market and upset the delicate ecosystem of supply and demand, which were compounded by the incredibly risky decision by the G7, at the behest of the US Treasury, to impose a price cap on Russia’s oil sales abroad.

    On top of it, the Biden administration’s provocative moves to release oil regularly from the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve in attempts to micromanage the oil prices and keep them abnormally low in the interests of the American consumer as well as to keep the inflationary pressures under check turned out to be an affront to the oil-producing countries whose economies critically depend on income from oil exports.

    The OPEC+ calls the production cuts “a precautionary measure aimed at supporting the stability of the oil market.” In the downstream of the OPEC+ decision, analysts expect the oil prices to rise in the short term and pressure on Western central banks to increase due to the possible spike in inflation.

    What stands out in the OPEC+ decision is that Russia’s decision to reduce oil production by the end of the year has been unanimously supported by the main Arab producers. Independent but time-coordinated statements were made by Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, Algeria, Oman and Kazakhstan, while Russia confirmed its intention to extend until the end of the year its own production reduction by 500,000 barrels per day, which began in March.

    Significantly, these statements have been made precisely by those largest oil producers in OPEC, who have a record of fully utilising their existing quota. Put differently, the reduction in production is going to be real, not just on paper.

    Partly at least, the banking crisis in the US and Europe prompted the OPEC+ to intervene. Although Washington will downplay it, in March, Brent oil prices fell to $70 per barrel for the first time since 2021 amid the bankruptcy of several banks in the US and the near-death experience of Credit Suisse, one of the largest banks in Switzerland. The events sparked concern about the stability of the Western banking system and fear of a recession that would affect oil demand.

    There is every likelihood that tensions may increase between the US and Saudi Arabia as higher oil prices will push inflation and make it even more difficult for the US Federal Reserve to find a balance between raising the key rate and maintaining financial and economic stability. Equally, the Biden administration must be furious that practical cooperation is still continuing between Russia and the OPEC countries, especially Saudi Arabia, notwithstanding the West’s price cap on Russian oil and Moscow’s decision to unilaterally cut production in March.

    However, the Biden administration has only a limited range of options to respond to the OPEC+’s surprise move: one, go for another release of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve; two, pressure US producers to increase domestic oil output; three, back legislation that would allow the US to take the dramatic step of suing OPEC nations; or, four, curb the US’ export of gasoline and diesel.

    To be sure, the OPEC+ production cut goes against the Western demand to increase oil output even as sanctions were imposed against Russian oil and gas exports. On the other hand, the disruption in oil supplies from Russia contributed to the rising inflation in the EU countries.

    The US wanted the Gulf Arab states to step in and step up oil production. But the latter did not oblige because they felt that there wasn’t enough economic activity in the West and there were clear signs of recession contrary to expectation.

    Thus, as a result of the sanctions against Russia, Europe is facing the complex situation of inflation and near-recession known as stagflation. In reality, the adaptive and agile OPEC + read the situation correctly and has shown that it is willing to act ahead of the curve. At a time when the world economy is struggling to grow at a healthy rate, the demand for oil would be relatively less, and it makes sense to cut oil production to maintain the price balance.

    All that the Western leaders can complain about is that the OPEC+ cut in oil output has come at an inappropriate time. But the woes of Western economies cannot be laid at the door of OPEC+ as there are inherent problems which are now coming to the surface. For instance, the large scale protests in France against pension reform or the widespread strikes in Britain for higher wages show that there are deep structural problems in these economies, and the governments seem helpless in tackling them.

    In geopolitical terms, the OPEC+ move came after a meeting between Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak and Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman in Riyadh on March 16 that focused on oil market cooperation. Therefore, it is widely seen as the tightening of the bond between Russia and Saudi Arabia. In fact, in May, as the largest members of OPEC join Russia in its unilateral reduction, the balance of quotas and the ratio of market shares between and amongst the participants in the OPEC + deal will return to the level set when it was concluded in April 2020.

    The big question is, how Moscow might profit from the OPEC+ decision. The rise in crude oil prices particularly benefits Russia. Simply put, the production cuts will tighten up the oil market and thus help Russia to secure better prices for the crude oil it sells. Second, the new cuts also confirm that Russia is still an integral and important part of the group of oil producing countries, despite the western attempts to isolate it.

    Third, the consequences of Sunday’s decision are all the greater because, unlike the previous cuts by the OPEC+ group at the height of the pandemic or last October, today, the momentum for global oil demand is up, not down — what with a strong recovery by China expected.

    That is to say, the surprise OPEC+ reduction further consolidates the Saudi-Russian energy alliance, by aligning their production levels, thus placing them on equal footing. It is a slap in the face for Washington.

    Make no mistake, this is another signal regarding a new era where the Saudis are not afraid of the US anymore, as the OPEC “leverage” is on Riyadh’s side. The Saudis are only doing what they need to do, and the White House has no say in the matter. Clearly, a recasting of the regional and global dynamics that has been set in motion lately is gathering momentum. The future of petrodollar seems increasingly uncertain."

    OPEC: Saudis aren’t afraid of US anymore - Indian Punchline
    Last edited by OhOh; 05-04-2023 at 05:46 PM.
    A tray full of GOLD is not worth a moment in time.

  10. #10
    hangin' around cyrille's Avatar
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    Ooh yes, the black king's strategy.

    Yet the movers and shakers apparently just moved a white pawn.

    While the black pieces have their own strategies.

    Hope they've chatted about it previously.


  11. #11
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    The first effect of Saudi-Iran pact is out and it’s not pretty for Europe.


  12. #12
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Prices have barely moved from the February/March level.

    Nothing to see here, just an excitable hoohoo that hasn't got a fucking clue.


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