Russia to consider extension of oil output cut deal with OPEC: deputy PM

Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Anton Siluanov said that Moscow will consider a possible extension of its oil output reduction pact with OPEC. (AFP)
Updated 29 May 2019
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Russia to consider extension of oil output cut deal with OPEC: deputy PM

  • OPEC, Russia and other producers agreed to cut output by 1.2 million barrels per day from January for six months
  • OPEC and the other producers involved in the supply agreement are scheduled to meet to discuss extending the pact

Russia will carefully consider extending its oil output reduction agreement with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and other producers, Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Anton Siluanov told Reuters on Wednesday.

Moscow will weigh, in particular, the deal’s positive effect on oil prices against losses in market share to United States companies, he said.

“There are many arguments both in favor of the extension and against it,” Siluanov said on the sidelines of a conference in Kazakhstan.

“Of course, we need price stability and predictability, this is good,” he said. “But we see that all these deals with OPEC result in our American partners boosting shale oil output and grabbing new markets.”

Russia’s energy ministry and government will determine their stance on the pact’s extension after weighing these pros and cons and the longevity of current market trends, Siluanov said.

OPEC, Russia and other producers agreed to cut output by 1.2 million barrels per day (bpd) from January for six months to boost oil prices by reducing global inventories.

OPEC and the other producers involved in the supply agreement, an alliance known as OPEC+, are scheduled to meet to discuss extending the pact in Vienna during an OPEC meeting scheduled for June 25 and 26.

The meeting, however, may be pushed back to July 3 and 4, two OPEC sources said on May 20.


Italy’s Saipem wins $3.1bn offshore contract for Qatar’s North Field project 

Updated 6 sec ago
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Italy’s Saipem wins $3.1bn offshore contract for Qatar’s North Field project 

RIYADH: Italy’s Saipem has secured an offshore engineering, procurement, construction and installation contract worth about $3.1 billion for its share of a major gas project in Qatar. 

The contract, awarded by QatarEnergy LNG, covers the COMP5 package of the North Field Production Sustainability Offshore Compression Complexes project. The total value of the award is approximately $4 billion, Saipem said in a statement. 

The award forms part of QatarEnergy LNG’s strategy to maintain and increase production capacity at the North Field, the world’s largest non-associated natural gas field, located off the northeastern coast of Qatar. 

The project scope includes the “engineering, procurement, fabrication and installation of two compression complexes, each including a compression platform, a living quarter platform, a flare platform supporting the gas combustion system, and the related interconnecting bridges.” 

Each complex will have a total weight of about 68,000 tonnes. 

The contract has a total duration of approximately 5 years. Saipem said offshore installation operations will be carried out by its De He construction vessel in 2029 and 2030. 

The new contract follows the EPCI COMP2 and COMP3 packages, which were awarded to Saipem in October 2022 and September 2024, respectively, and are currently under execution. 

“The award of the COMP5 package consolidates Saipem’s collaboration with QatarEnergy LNG and reinforces the company’s presence in Qatar as a partner for the execution of complex large-scale projects,” the company said. 

QatarEnergy CEO Saad Al-Kaabi said last month that the broader North Field expansion project remains on track to produce its first liquefied natural gas in the second half of 2026, Reuters reported. 

The wider North Field project involves the construction of six gas trains to cool natural gas into liquefied natural gas for export by ship.  

Saipem, which is listed on the Milan Stock Exchange, operates as a “One Company” organized into several business lines, including asset-based services, drilling, energy carriers, offshore wind, and sustainable infrastructures. 

The company owns five fabrication yards, along with a fleet of 17 construction vessels and 12 drilling rigs.