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OPEC production down as Saudi trims output

Oil production from OPEC totalled 31.26mn b/d in August, down 140,000 b/d from the July level of 31.4mn b/d as several member countries, including Saudi Arabia, trimmed output, according to the latest (8 September) Platts survey of OPEC and oil industry officials and analysts.

‘This is the first time OPEC output has fallen since February, but it shouldn’t be over-interpreted,’ said Margaret McQuaile, Senior Correspondent for Platts. ‘The August total still puts OPEC exceeding its official ceiling by 1.26mn b/d and Saudi oil is still flowing at record levels.’

Despite having rolled over the ceiling – in place since the beginning of 2012 – in June for a further six months, OPEC has no mechanism for enforcing it as there are no individual country quotas.  Furthermore, with Iran preparing to increase supply once international sanctions are removed, the battle for market share that initially appeared to be focused on non-OPEC producers is now also raging within OPEC itself.

Saudi Arabia, having pumped at record levels above 10mn b/d since March, scaled back supply by 50,000 b/d to 10.4mn b/d in August. The kingpin producer, which drove OPEC’s November 2014 decision not to reduce output despite sliding oil prices, has given no indication that it is ready to abandon its market share strategy.

Smaller decreases came from Iraq, Libya, Angola and Qatar.

Libyan production remains at less than one quarter of its 1.6mn b/d capacity, with output slipping to just 360,000 b/d in August from 390,000 b/d in July because of ongoing technical problems at fields in eastern Libya and continued blockades of other key oil infrastructure across the country.

In Iraq, exports in August were slightly down on both July and June because of a slight fall in southern exports and the ongoing restrictions on supplies via Turkey because of Kurdistan’s move to restart its own independent exports at the expense of the federal barrels it had been exporting on Baghdad’s behalf.

Concerns about the Chinese economy have helped drive crude prices downward in recent weeks. North Sea Brent hit a six-year low of $42.23/b in early September, but shortly thereafter clawed its way back to around $50/b.

News Item details


Journal title: Petroleum Review

Organisation: OPEC

Subjects: Oil production

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