The Opec logo. The producer group cannot agree on the role of Iraq and Iran in production cuts – the two countries want to expand their operations, but the group overall needs to reduce its output. Their disagreement is holding up discussions with the rest of the world's producers. Alexander Klein / AFP
The Opec logo. The producer group cannot agree on the role of Iraq and Iran in production cuts – the two countries want to expand their operations, but the group overall needs to reduce its output. ThShow more

Opec impasse prevents oil production deal in Vienna



Opec’s internal disagreements over how to implement oil-supply cuts agreed on last month prevented a deal to secure the cooperation of other major suppliers.

More than 18 hours of talks over two days in Vienna yielded little more than a promise that the world’s largest oil producers would keep on talking. Discussions will continue in late November, just days before the producer group is supposed to finalise the accord that lifted oil prices to one-year highs.

Non-Opec nations ended talks with the group on Saturday without making any supply commitments, Brazil’s oil and gas secretary Marcio Felix said after the meeting. The outcome of the process hinges on Iran and Iraq, two nations that are more interested in increasing production than reducing it, said Azerbaijan’s energy minister Natiq Aliyev.

While Saturday’s meeting was a successful “first step”, oil-producing nations need to continue dialogue and “come up with real numbers” before cuts can begin, Kazakhstan’s deputy energy minister Magzum Mirzagaliyev said.

A deal wasn’t possible because internal Opec talks on Friday reached an impasse over the role of Iran and Iraq, both of which want to be exempt from any cuts. While the non-member Oman said on Saturday it was willing to cooperate in a supply deal, it couldn’t commit to a specific output cut until Opec had its own agreement.

Opec’s surprise agreement in Algiers to make the first supply cuts in eight years will only make a serious dent in a record oil surplus if producers outside the group join in. While the accord helped push oil prices to a 15-month high above US$50 a barrel earlier this month, they have subsequently fallen as several members disputed the production estimates that would determine the size of cuts. Failure to implement last month’s accord will hurt oil producers, the organisation’s top official warned.

Opec agreed in the Algerian capital on September 28 to reduce output to a range of 32.5 million to 33 million barrels a day, compared with about 33.4 million bpd in September. Friday’s meeting of technical experts from members of the group was intended to finalise details of how those supply curbs would be shared. Talks with non-Opec nations on Saturday sought to seek wider participation in cuts.

None of the countries that attended Friday’s meeting specified how much they were willing to cut, said one delegate. Progress was made on the methodology to be used for allocating individual production curbs, the delegate said.

On Saturday, no concrete output limits for non-Opec countries were discussed, two participants said. Attendees did discuss differences between nations’ own oil-production data and sources used in Opec’s own estimates, which have been disputed by members including Iran, Iraq and Venezuela, one of the people said.

Russia reiterated that it was willing to freeze production, rather than cut, but only if there was an internal Opec agreement first, the people said. The largest producer outside Opec is pumping at a post-Soviet record of about 11.1 million bpd.

As the meeting opened in Vienna, the Opec secretary-general Mohammed Barkindo warned of the consequences if producers did not follow through on the Algiers agreement. The price recovery has already taken far too long and producers can’t risk delaying it further, he said.

“Anything short of implementation of this accord could lead to the elongation of the rebalancing process, with further deterioration of financial conditions and setbacks in investments extending into a third year, which would be unprecedented,” Mr Barkindo said. “We should be calling for maximum commitment from all Opec and non-Opec countries.”

Representatives of Azerbaijan, Brazil, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Oman and Russia attended Saturday’s meeting with officials from Opec member states. Those countries collectively produced about 19.6 million barrels a day of oil last year, about 21 per cent of global supply and equivalent to half of Opec’s output, according to BP’s Statistical Review of World Energy.

Oman is willing to cut production as part of deal with other producers, but is waiting for Opec to reach an internal agreement before deciding on the size of its own supply reduction, said Ali Al Riyami, the nation’s representative at the meeting in Vienna. The country pumped about 1 million bpd in May.

No Cuts

Brazil attended the talks only as an observer, Mr Felix said before the meeting. The Latin American country will boost output by 290,000 bpd next year to 2.9 million bpd, the biggest increase of any non-Opec nation, according to the International Energy Agency. Production will keep growing for the next few years, said Mr Felix.

“We in Brazil believe in the force of the market” and the government could not force any company to restrict output, he said.

Kazakhstan also plans to boost output next year following the restart this month of the $50 billion Kashagan oilfield after 16 years of development. The field is currently pumping about 100,000 bpd, which should rise to 200,000 by the end of the year and 370,000 by the end of next year, the Italian oil company Eni said on Friday.

“The Kashagan launch is a huge deal for us and we are not ready to abandon it. We are not planning that,” said Mr Mirzagaliyev.

* Bloomberg

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