Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on December 11, 2014

Bookmark and Share

Saudi Oil Minister Naimi: Why Should We Cut Production?

Production

Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi on Wednesday shrugged off suggestions that the world’s biggest crude exporter might cut production to reverse the deepest price slump in years, saying the kingdom’s output had remained steady through last month.

Naimi’s comments on the sidelines of an annual U.N. climate change conference in Lima, Peru, stuck to the message he laid out at OPEC’s meeting two weeks ago: The market would be left to balance itself without the kingdom’s intervention. That stance was seen as a shift from longstanding Saudi policy to act as a swing supplier.

Oil prices have dropped $13 a barrel since that November meeting. Yet asked on Wednesday whether he thought it would be necessary to reduce oil production prior to OPEC’s next scheduled meeting in June, Naimi responded: “Why should we cut production? Why?”

At the same event, Venezuela’s foreign minister and top OPEC emissary Rafael Ramirez provided his country’s answer to Naimi’s question: OPEC must act, he told Reuters, because “that is our job. We want stability in the market and predictability.”

Ramirez said Venezuela would evaluate whether to back a call for an emergency OPEC meeting after seeing how oil prices perform in the first quarter.

He said it would be up to Nigeria, the current head of the cartel, to summon members to an extraordinary gathering to respond to the price collapse.

“It’s worrisome not just for Venezuela, but for all countries in OPEC,” he said.

Last month, Gulf producers overruled Venezuela’s push for an OPEC production cut.

The comments highlight growing division within the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries. Core Gulf producers have the cash reserves to ride out a spell of lower prices, while more vulnerable economies like Venezuela’s are already strained by sub-$100 crude.

Naimi said the Kingdom produced 9.6 million to 9.7 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude in November, a figure consistent with October estimates.

“That is not going to change unless other customers come and say they want more oil,” he said.

His comments came after U.S. data showed a sharp rise in weekly U.S. oil inventories, and OPEC cut its forecast for demand for its crude in 2015 to 280,000 bpd below its previous expectation.

Oil prices slid 5 percent to their lowest since 2009.

Market Forces And Capitalist Nations

Saudi Arabia’s decision to let market forces prevail has triggered a free-fall in oil markets. Traders have been wondering how low prices must fall before the kingdom finally intervenes, and looking for signs of a slowdown in output from U.S. shale fields that are feeding a global surplus.

For Venezuela, one OPEC member considered most vulnerable to a prolonged slide in prices, the situation is growing dire. On Wednesday the price of its crude export basket fell to a more than five-year low of $61.92.

“The drop in oil price is not good for anyone,” Ramirez said in an interview, reiterating that Caracas sees $100 as a ‘fair price’.

“The oil price has cycles that allow producing countries to build our production capability,” he added.

“Whoever is euphoric and applauding oil prices now is going to have to face the consequences later when there has not been enough capacity built to satisfy international demand.”

Naimi struck a different note.

“You come from capitalist nations. You know what the market does,” he told reporters. “For any commodity, what does it do? It goes up and down, up and down.”

Repeating an often-used line, when asked if he was worried about oil prices, he said “have you ever seen me worried?”

RIGZONE



4 Comments on "Saudi Oil Minister Naimi: Why Should We Cut Production?"

  1. shortonoil on Thu, 11th Dec 2014 6:45 am 

    “That is not going to change unless other customers come and say they want more oil,” he said.

    Customers are not going to step forward, and ask for more oil! Your oil is no longer worth what you are asking for it. The producers are using more and more of its energy to produce it, and the customers are getting less, and less; but the producers believe they can continue to ask more, and more for it. Looks like there is a major disconnect with reality going on here.

    http://www.thehillsgroup.org/depletion2_022.htm

  2. Makati1 on Thu, 11th Dec 2014 7:45 am 

    There is no reality in financial or economic activities now. It’s a war of resources and fiat currencies where no statistics are real. Exciting, Isn’t it?

  3. rockman on Thu, 11th Dec 2014 7:45 am 

    “…Caracas sees $100 as a ‘fair price’.” Always difficult to tell if such talking heads just feel they have to respond to situations as we have today to appease their audience or if they are really that ignorant of the dynamics. There is no such thing as a “fair” or “unfair” price of oil. There is only the price that consumers are willing to pay. Consumers feel high prices are unfair while producers feel that low prices are unfair. The same holds true for export volumes. No fair or unfair rates there either. There’s the volume that the exporters chose to sell. Whatever volume they chose it will seem fair to some and unfair to others. But regardless of the characterization it’s still a matter of choice for the exporters to decide volumes based upon the price the consumers are willing to pay and the revenue they accept.

  4. Kenz300 on Sat, 13th Dec 2014 10:03 am 

    When US fracking slows….. when Russia and Iran agree to slow production…… when high cost investment projects are shelved……… then KSA will cut production.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *