Russia’s Lukoil says OPEC deal should be open ended

Filters

Vagit Alekperov, the CEO of Russian multinational oil company Lukoil, has stated that he believes the various parties to the OPEC-led production cuts should give up on speculating about when the deal might expire. He believes this will give producers more flexibility in reacting to market conditions.

Speaking at Lukoil’s investor day in London, he said:

“I believe no timeframes [for the deal] are needed. [The deal’s participants] need to see how the market will react, to see firstly on stocks and how the market will react on the demand increase and then react flexibly — to increase or cut [output].”

Alekperov’s comments concur with recent comments by Saudi energy minister Khalid al-Falih, who sees cuts continuing past 2018 in some form. The OPEC-led deal came into force at the start of 2017 and has since been extended twice. There now seems to be growing momentum for some form of permanent mechanism to react to market conditions. OPEC officials are seeking to formalize their arrangement with Russia and other non-OPEC partners but no details have yet come forward, and Alexander Novak, the Russian energy minister, recently told reporters that no such proposals had yet been discussed.

Even with Russia on board, substantial oil production still lies outside the influence of OPEC. The United States in particular is enjoying booming oil production from its shale fields and the federal waters of the Gulf of Mexico. While it is profitable to do so, US producers like ExxonMobil, which also produces lubricants for Mobil UK stockists, will continue to pump oil.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

You may also interested in:

Petronas and Petrobras sign contract for Brazilian oil fields

State-funded Malaysian oil and gas company, Petronas, recently completed a new transaction with Petrobras, the Brazilian oil major.

French oil major completes UK asset merger

Paris headquartered energy giant, TotalEnergies, recently finalised the merger of its upstream portfolio in the UK North Sea with the offshore gas and oil company, NEO NEXT.

Asia Pacific to dominate global base oil market

An industry report has highlighted that Asia Pacific is well positioned to dominate the base oil sector by 2030.