OPEC+ panel said to hold informal talks on Saturday

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Fri, 2020-11-27 23:24

DUBAI: A panel of OPEC+, a group of leading oil producing countries, will hold informal online talks on Saturday prior to meetings scheduled for next week, a letter seen by Reuters showed and sources with knowledge of the matter said.

OPEC+ is debating whether to ease oil output cuts from Jan. 1, as it previously agreed, or to continue producing at the same rate amid sluggish oil demand and the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic.
The letter from the OPEC said that Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak will attend Saturday’s informal consultations of the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee’s heads.
Novak was energy minister until earlier this month, leading Moscow’s efforts to forge closer ties with OPEC and clinch the deal on output cuts. OPEC+ will meet on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 to decide output policy for next year.
The group was due to raise output by 2 million barrels per day in January — about 2 percent of global consumption — as part of a steady easing of record supply cuts implemented this year.

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OPEC+ will meet on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 to decide output policy for next year.

But with demand for fuel weakening because of a second wave of the pandemic, OPEC+ has been considering delaying the increase or even making further cuts.
On Thursday, Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari said that his country needed to produce more oil to support its economy and build infrastructure for its sizeable population, many of whom are poor.
He urged OPEC to consider that when sharing oil production cuts, according to a statement from his office.
Nigeria, earlier this month, asked OPEC to reevaluate its oil production quota by ategorizing its Agbami field as condensate.
Doing so would improve Nigeria’s compliance. Three out of OPEC’s six secondary sources count the stream as crude, with the rest considering it a condensate. In response, Algeria, which currently holds the OPEC presidency, said that any attempt to change oil production quotas could lead to oil market collapse.

 

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