OPEC+ leaves oil market wondering after postponing meeting indefinitely

The OPEC+ alliance was unable to reach an agreement last week on extending the current oil output deal. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 06 July 2021
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OPEC+ leaves oil market wondering after postponing meeting indefinitely

  • The OPEC+ alliance was unable to reach an agreement last week on extending the current oil output deal

DUBAI: A crucial meeting of the energy ministers of OPEC+ was called off on Monday as the UAE insisted on conditions unacceptable to the other 22 members
of the oil producers’ alliance led by Saudi Arabia and Russia.

The cancellation of the meeting — reconvened from last week — left global oil markets uncertain about how producers will meet rising demand as the pandemic recovery gathers pace.

Brent crude, the global benchmark, maintained its three-year high of about $77 a barrel after the cancelation.

Mohammed Barkindo, secretary-general of the Organization of Oil Exporting Countries, told ministers: “Upon consultations with Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman, Minister of Energy of Saudi Arabia, and Alexander Novak, Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation — chairman and co-chairman of OPEC+ — the reconvened 18th meeting has been called off.

“The date of the next meeting will be decided in due course and we will inform you accordingly. On behalf of the chairman and co-chairman, we regret any inconvenience caused.”

One energy official told Arab News: “It was notable that the meeting never even got started, and was called off rather than postponed.”

Proposals for a gradual increase of 400,000 barrels per day between August and the end of the year were rejected by the UAE because the country’s energy minister objected to a parallel proposal to extend the OPEC+ regime of output controls beyond the original cut-off date of next April.

That proposal was agreed on by the OPEC+ participants, including the two biggest producers Saudi Arabia and Russia, as a way of ensuring stability and flexibility in global oil markets into 2022, when rising demand, potential supply fluctuations, and possible pandemic resurgence could increase volatility.

Prince Abdul Aziz made clear that the planned output increases and the OPEC+ extension were essential to ensure that stability. “The extension is there in the agreement, it is not a branch of it,” he said on Saudi TV on Sunday.

The UAE objected to the extension on the ground that its output had been set “unfairly” from a low base in the 2020 deal that brought some calm back to markets roiled by the pandemic recession and fall in demand.

Despite the UAE’s hardening position, some experts believe that there is still room for a compromise.

Robin Mills, chief executive of energy consultancy Qamar Energy, told Arab News: “We will have to see if a compromise can be reached in the next few days — perhaps a delay in extending the agreement while baselines are assessed, or a compromise increase in the UAE baseline.”

 

 


Closing Bell: Saudi main index holds steady at 10,626

Updated 11 sec ago
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Closing Bell: Saudi main index holds steady at 10,626

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index was broadly stable on Monday, as it marginally declined by 0.05 percent to close at 10,625.50.

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index stood at SR3.42 billion ($910 million), with 84 of the listed stocks advancing and 167 declining.

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu shed 150.97 points or 0.63 percent to close at 23,911.47.

The MSCI Tadawul Index edged up by 0.18 percent to 1,397.01.

The best-performing stock on the main market was Bupa Arabia for Cooperative Insurance Co. Its share price increased by 5.68 percent to SR150.80.

The share price of East Pipes Integrated Co. for Industry rose by 3.58 percent to SR138.80.

On Tuesday, the company announced that it signed a six-month contract worth SR485 million with the Saudi Water Authority to manufacture and supply steel pipes.

The firm added that the financial impact of the contract will be visible on the company’s financials in the final three months of this year and the first quarter of 2026.

On the main market, ARTEX Industrial Investment Co. also saw its stock price increase by 3.57 percent to SR11.59.

Conversely, the share price of Abdullah Saad Mohammed Abo Moati for Bookstores Co. declined by 6.47 percent to SR44.24.

On the announcements front, Power and Water Utility Co., Marafiq for Jubail and Yanbu, said that it reached an amicable settlement with Saudi Aramco in relation to the supply of heavy fuel oil to the firm’s facility in Yanbu 2.

Under the agreement, Saudi Aramco will pay approximately SR70 million, and Marafiq will be exempted from paying certain handling fees, as well as operation, maintenance, and rental costs for specific facilities over varying timeframes, with an amount not exceeding approximately SR15 million annually until 2033.

The share price of Marafiq edged up by 0.78 percent to SR38.64.