March 28, 2024

OPEC Leaves Production Quotas in Place

Members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries left their 30 million barrel-per-day quota for oil production intact Wednesday, a decision that indicates the cartel’s satisfaction with current crude prices and its reluctance to do anything to further weaken the world economy.

But even though it stuck with the status quo, the group, whose representatives are in Vienna for the meeting, may face serious tests in the near future, as rising production outside the cartel threatens its market share and influence in the world.

So far, OPEC has had an easy year. Crude prices have been stable and within the range the organization favors. Although U.S. oil prices have fallen into a $80- to $90-per-barrel range, the non-U.S. benchmark Brent crude remains well above $100 per barrel. The OPEC basket, which members considers representative of what they receive for their oil, was $104.80 per barrel on Tuesday.

“At these prices no one wants to rock the boat,” said Bhushan Bahree, an OPEC analyst at IHS Cera , who was in Vienna for the meeting.

But the global oil market is going through major changes, led by the surge in oil production in the United States, which reached 6.5 million barrels per day in September, the highest since 1998 and a huge 900,000 barrels-per-day increase from a year earlier, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Iraq, an OPEC member not subject to the organization’s quotas because the country is recovering from the ravages of war, is also rapidly increasing production and now is at levels last seen in the late 1990s.

OPEC is unlikely to escape being buffeted by these shifts. “More production in the U.S. means there is less available for OPEC,” said Jamie Webster, an analyst for Washington-based consultants PFCEnergy, who was in Vienna observing the meeting.

The cartel’s 12 members — Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Venezuela — produce roughly one third of global oil output.

The high oil prices of recent years have led oil companies to invest heavily in exploration and in techniques to extract hydrocarbons that until recently were off limits, such as from the shale formations in North Dakota in the United States. As a result, supply is increasing faster than just about anyone expected, while demand remains sluggish thanks to the tepid world economy.

IHS Cera expects the global supply of oil from non-OPEC producers like the United States, Kazakhstan, and Brazil to grow by 1.2 million barrels per day next year — well ahead of demand, which is only likely to increase by 800,000 barrels per day.

Should this prediction, which is similar to the cartel’s own forecast, prove on the mark, OPEC will need to trim its output, giving up market share. The signs are that it is already doing so. An OPEC report published Wednesday showed that Saudi Arabia, the key decision maker in the group, had already cut output by 200,000 barrels per day in November to 9.5 million barrels per day, the lowest since October 2011.

The cartel’s own report says that demand for OPEC oil will be 29.7 million barrels per day in 2013 — a roughly 1.3 million barrel per day decline from the present.

“If the world ends up with a lot more capacity to produce oil than appetite to consume it, then either OPEC countries have to figure out a way to cut back production or prices will crash,” said Michael Levi, an energy fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Sometimes OPEC doesn’t make decisions, but individual countries do and then others follow.”

Abdalla Salem El-Badri, the OPEC secretary general, acknowledged the possibility of production cuts in Vienna on Wednesday. “Maybe in the coming months we will produce less,” he said.

Recently, OPEC members have not published specific quotas, but the whole organization was supposed to observe a 30 million barrel-per-day ceiling, which it is now exceeding by around 1 million barrels per day. This lack of specific targets allows the Saudis to try to keep the global system balanced by adjusting the amount of oil they sell without the need to haggle over changes.

But if prices look in danger of plummeting, they will ask their Gulf neighbors and the wider organization to help out, possibly threatening the organization’s cohesion.

“It could cause tension in OPEC if they had to cut back substantially to shore up prices; some of the pain might have to be shared,” said Mr. Bahree of IHS CERA.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/13/business/global/opec-leaves-production-quotas-in-place.html?partner=rss&emc=rss