Page added on January 15, 2008
The members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) produced an average 32.03 million barrels per day (b/d) of crude oil in December, according to a Platts survey of OPEC and oil industry officials January 14. This is up from November’s rate of 31.65 million b/d.
Production from OPEC’s ten members bound by crude output agreements averaged 27.43 million b/d in December, the survey showed. This is 460,000 b/d more than in November and 177,000 b/d higher than the group’s 27.253 million b/d target which came into effect at the beginning of November.
“The increase in supply is certainly welcome to this market,” said John Kingston, Platts Global Director of Oil. “It appears the group’s on track to meet its January target, which is nearly 29.7 million barrels per day for 11 of the members, excluding Iraq.”
The bulk of the December output increase was due to higher production from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as key maintenance programs were brought to a close. UAE production was estimated at 2.5 million b/d, 350,000 b/d higher than November’s 2.15 million b/d. Smaller increases of between 10,000 b/d and 40,000 b/d came from Indonesia, Iran, Kuwait, Libya and Saudi Arabia. The OPEC 10 excludes Iraq and new members Angola and Ecuador.
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