ALGIERS,
Algeria (AP) — OPEC nations have reached a preliminary agreement to
curb oil production for the first time since the global financial crisis
eight years ago, immediately pushing up oil prices.
Mohammed
Bin Saleh Al-Sada, Qatar’s energy minister and current president of
OPEC, announced the deal after several hours of talks Wednesday in the
Algerian capital.
The
preliminary deal will limit output from the Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries to 32.5 million barrels per day, he said.
Current output is estimated at 33.2 million barrels per day.
Disagreements between regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran had dimmed hopes for a deal.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.
OPEC
countries neared agreement on a preliminary accord Wednesday to limit
oil production, sending oil prices upward, despite lingering differences
between regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran.
Officials
from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries were meeting
informally on the sidelines of an energy conference in Algiers to try
to find common ground on how to support oil markets. Experts say that
would require a decision to limit output — an idea Iran still views with
skepticism, as it’s trying to restore its oil industry since emerging
from international sanctions this year.
Algerian
officials said participants reached a “pre-accord” on production curbs
to be finalized at an OPEC meeting in Vienna in November. Algeria’s
prime minister is scheduled to provide details later Wednesday night.
The officials were not authorized to be publicly named.
Benchmark
U.S. crude jumped $2.38, or 5.3 percent, to $47.05 a barrel in New
York. Brent crude, the international standard, was up $2.72, or 5.9
percent, to $48.69 a barrel in London.
Iran
would not have the same proportional reductions as other countries
under the pre-accord, but would limit production to 3.7 million barrels a
day, according to an adviser to Algeria’s energy minister. It is
currently estimated to be pumping around 3.6 million.
Algerian officials shuttled through the night between delegations to try to secure agreement.
Earlier,
Iranian Petroleum Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh played down the OPEC
gathering, calling it “just a consultation meeting … If there is a
decision, it should be taken at the next (OPEC) meeting in Vienna in
November.”
The
price of crude oil has fallen sharply since mid-2014, when it was over
$100 a barrel, dropping below $30 at the start of this year.
Saudi
Arabia, the world’s biggest oil producer and Iran’s rival for power in
the Middle East, appears to be more amenable to some sort of production
limit, certainly more so than in April when OPEC failed to agree on
measures to curb supplies.
Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih has this week promised to “support any decision aimed at stabilizing the market.”
Over
the past couple of years, OPEC countries, led by Saudi Arabia, had been
willing to let the oil price drop as a means of driving some U.S. shale
oil and gas producers out of business. Shale oil and gas requires a
higher price to break even.
Those
lower prices have hurt many oil-producing nations hard, particularly
OPEC members Venezuela and Nigeria, but also Russia and Brazil.
Culled from AP in Yahoo
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