Tuesday 16 February 2016

Saudi Arabia and Russia set to freeze oil production


With crude oil losing more than 70 per cent of its value in just 18 months, Saudi Arabia and Russia have agreed to freeze oil output in a meeting in Qatar.  Ali al-Naimi, the Saudi Arabian oil minister met with Alexander Novakin Doha, his Russian counterpart, and representatives from Venezuela and Qatar in Doha on Tuesday where they agreed a freeze in the oil production at January levels.
"Freezing now at the January level is adequate for the market," said Saudi Arabian Oil Minister, Ali al-Naimi.
"We don't want significant gyrations in prices, we want to meet demand. We want a stable oil price."
The agreement fell short of cutting production to shore up oil prices. The price of brent crude surged 6 per cent on Tuesday to trade at $35.22 a barrel in anticipation of an agreement. It slipped back from earlier gains after the announcement was made, reflecting disappointment that production would not be reduced. Many oil producers are already pumping at full capacity. The drop in oil value has wreaked havoc on the oil-dependent economies such as Saudi Arabia, which has been forced to make sweeping welfare cuts. The kingdom insisted it wouldn’t curb production unless other producers in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed to co-operate. Venezuela had lobbied exporters including Russia, Iran and Saudi Arabia to arrange a meeting with OPEC to try and reach an agreement, reports Independent .

2 comments:

  1. would see how this decision goes

    ReplyDelete
  2. oil dependent countries need to look for other source of income

    ReplyDelete