OPEC said on Monday
its oil production fell in February despite member Iran steadily increasing its
output after international sanctions were lifted in January following a
landmark nuclear deal.
The decrease can be
largely attributed to a steep production drop in Iraq, which has suffered from
the global price slump for crude and rival oil exports by the autonomous
Kurdistan region, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries said in
its February monthly report.
Crude output dropped by 175,000 barrels per day in February
to average 32.28 million barrels per day (mbpd), it said. “Crude oil output
decreased mostly from Iraq, Nigeria and (United Arab Emirates), while
production increased in Iran, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait,” the report noted.
The cartel’s output still exceeds demand, which the cartel
now projects at 31.5 mbpd, slightly lower than last month. Iran, which has the
world’s second-largest crude reserves, pumped out 3.1 mbpd in February, up from
2.9 in January, according to OPEC.
World oil prices fell sharply on Monday after Tehran
reportedly announced over the weekend that it would only join an output freeze
proposed by Saudi Arabia and Russia once its supply had reached pre-sanction
levels of 4.0 mbpd. Despite the losses, the oil market has picked up in recent
weeks, prompting the International Energy Agency to suggest on Friday that a
tentative recovery may be underway.
The OPEC reference basket rebounded for the first time in
three months, the cartel said, gaining more than 8% to reach $35.62 on Monday.
The cartel attributed this to “numerous positive factors, such as the freeze
proposal and “a fairly healthy physical oil market… despite ongoing oversupply,
a slowing global economy, record high inventories and a strengthening US
dollar”.
Crude prices have crashed from peaks above $100 per barrel
in mid-2014 to under $30. While OPEC had traditionally cut back production to
support prices, cartel kingpin Saudi Arabia this time changed tack. It stepped
up output to defend market share and push out higher-price producers like US
shale oil companies. The strategy appears to be partially working, with the
cartel predicting a production drop of 700,000 barrels per day this year in
non-OPEC countries led by North America, to an average 56.93 mbpd. “The
expectation of reduced cash flow in 2016 has prompted many companies to reduce
investments, deferring major new projects until a sustained price recovery can
be maintained,” OPEC said. The organisation added that it would “closely
monitor” the impact of lower oil prices on government spending plans in the
Middle East.
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