Oil production from the Organisation of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) rose to another record, hitting 33.54
million barrels per day (b/d) in October.
The figure was significantly boosted by recoveries
in Nigeria and Libya and more than offset field maintenance in Angola.
The gains, which total 300,000 b/d from September
and marks the fifth consecutive month of increased production, further
complicate the path for OPEC to freeze production between 32.5 million to 33
million b/d in order to support prices and accelerate the drawdown of
inventories.
“OPEC’s freeze math has gotten more complicated as
its countries keep pumping more,” said Herman Wang, senior writer for S&P
Global Platts.
“With OPEC having self-imposed a November 30
deadline to finalise the freeze, the pressure will be on it to deliver a deal
that the market views as credible. Progress towards that goal has been slow,
and a fifth straight month of record high production won’t help.”Nigeria and
Libya are exempt from the freeze, according to the plan announced in Algiers
five weeks ago, but increases in Iraq and the expected return of Angolan
production once the Dalia field maintenance is complete will make it harder.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia, which is expected to bear
the brunt of any cuts that the producer group implements, saw its output
decline to 10.53 million b/d for October, with reduced crude consumption for
power generation as the peak summer air conditioning season ended.
Nigeria, which resumed loadings of key export
grades, Qua Iboe and Forcados, in late September,saw its production recover to
1.68 million b/d in October, as the exports of all of its key exports grades
have resumed.
But the volatile Niger Delta remains unstable and
sensitive, with chances of more militant attacks high, which means production
is still at risk.
Forcados production, which only resumed a month ago,
is expected to be affected this month after militants bombed the Trans-Forcados
pipeline last Wednesday.
Libya’s production rose to an average of 530,000 b/d
in October, as it continues to ramp up after exports from some if its eastern
ports have resumed.
Libya’s output has more than doubled since August,
as production recovered sharply following news in September that Libya’s
state-owned National Oil Corporation (NOC) had lifted force majeure at the
360,000 b/d Es Sider terminal and also the 220,000 b/d Ras Lanuf and 70,000 b/d
Zueitina terminals.
NOC chairman, Mustafa Sanalla, told S&P Global
Platts that Libyan oil production was now 585,000 b/d, and also that the Es
Sider terminal, which has been down since December 2014, was ready to begin
loadings “within days.”
Production in fields operated by the Waha Oil
Company, Harouge Oil Operations and Arabian Gulf Oil Company have also
increased in the past few months.
Angola production declined to 1.47 million b/d, as
the key Dalia field which produces around 200,000-250,000 b/d was down for
maintenance the entire month. Output is expected to come back online this
month.
Final details of OPEC’s freeze including individual
country allocations and which production estimates are used to verify
compliance are to be decided by the organisation’s next formal meeting,
November 30, in Vienna.
OPEC ministers on September 28 agreed to a
preliminary deal to freeze production between 32.5 million and 33 million b/d.
The organisation had been operating without any
official output ceiling since December 4, 2015 when it scrapped the 30 million
b/d ceiling that it had in place since January 2012.
OPEC will hold its next ministerial meeting on
November 30 in Vienna, when details of the freeze agreement are supposed to be
finalised.
Gabon officially rejoined OPEC on July 1 while
Indonesia reactivated its membership at the December 2015 meeting.
The estimate for Iraq includes volumes from
semi-autonomous Iraqi Kurdistan.
Iraq, the cartel’s second largest producer, had
output of 4.56 million b/d in the month, on increased exports. Its oil exports
in October were boosted by higher loadings from the southern terminals along
with a rise in pipeline exports from the Turkish port of Ceyhan.
The country, which has disputed secondary source
estimates – including from Platts used by OPEC to determine each country’s
monthly output – invited several media
organisations to Baghdad last month to detail its field-by-field production.
Iraqi oil officials have been adamant that Iraq will
“not back down” and will continue to produce at current levels, regardless of
whatever freeze agreement is reached. Its official production figure of 4.774
million b/d for September is higher than independent estimates, as it appears
to be double-counting some production in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional
Government.
Iraqi officials have complained that the lower
estimates could put the country at a disadvantage when OPEC decides the quotas
under the freeze.
Iran’s production rose slightly in October to 3.67
million b/d, according to the Platts survey, as exports reached a
post-sanctions high on increased interest from Europe on top of strong demand
in Asia.
The country, which has also complained about
secondary source estimates of its output being too low, has said it intends to
regain its pre-sanctions production level of about four million b/d before it
agrees to any freeze plan.
Analysts have, however, said Iran is unlikely to be
able to raise its production much further without significant investment.
Crude oil prices appreciated yesterday as a weaker
U.S. dollar buoyed sentiment in the market, lifting prices from five-week lows.
Also, concerns over supply disruptions in Nigeria
supported prices as militants in the Niger Delta oil hub attacked a pipeline
operated by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) last Wednesday.
The Brent crude traded up 55 cents, or 1.2 percent,
at $47.41 a barrel after touching a five-week low at $46.46 in the previous
session.
U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude was up 50
cents, or 1.1 percent, at $45.84 per barrel.
The U.S. dollar index slipped for a third session in
a row yesterday and was down 0.09 percent on concerns over the outcome of next
week’s U.S. presidential election, just as weak dollar makes dollar-denominated
oil less costly for importing countries.
The weaker dollar provided the market with some
reprieve even as crude prices fell to five-week lows in the previous session as
U.S. crude oil stockpiles soared more than 14 million barrels last week, the
largest weekly build since the U.S. Energy Information Administration started
keeping records in 1982.
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