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Iran 'welcomes' but does not commit to oil output freeze | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Iran's oil minister, Bijan Zanganeh, has welcomed the Saudi-Russian deal to keep a ceiling on oil output, but has not committed to limiting Iran's production. | |
He was quoted by the official news agency Shana, following a meeting in Tehran. | |
Venezuela and Qatar, which are part of the agreement, met to broker a deal with both Iran and Iraq. | |
Earlier, Iraq's oil ministry had said it was in favour of capping production. | |
Mr Zanganeh said: "We look forward to the beginning of co-operation between Opec and non-Opec countries and we support any measure that can stabilise the market and increase prices," | |
But he did not give any explicit promises that Iran would keep its own output at January's levels. | |
All the visiting oil minsters left without comment following the meeting. | |
Iran has only just restarted oil exports after sanctions were lifted. | Iran has only just restarted oil exports after sanctions were lifted. |
The agreement is designed to reflate oil prices, which have sunk by about 70% from their recent peak of $116 in June 2014 thanks to oversupply as the global economy slows down. | |
But the "freeze" in output at January levels simply allows oil producers to continue pumping at record levels. | |
After falling on Tuesday and early Wednesday, the price of a barrel of Brent crude rose by 5.7% to $34 a barrel. US crude was up 5% at $30.50. | |
FGE, international energy analysts, said: "Moves to freeze output at January levels will make little difference to the overall supply-demand balance this year and will not be enough to clear the 600,000 barrels per day surplus projected for the year." | FGE, international energy analysts, said: "Moves to freeze output at January levels will make little difference to the overall supply-demand balance this year and will not be enough to clear the 600,000 barrels per day surplus projected for the year." |
Freeze 'illogical' | |
Before the meeting, Iran's Opec envoy reportedly said it was "illogical" for it to join the oil output freeze agreed on Tuesday. | |
Mehdi Asali, quoted in Iranian newspaper Shargh, said Iran would continue to increase oil production until it reached pre-sanction levels. | |
"Asking Iran to freeze its oil production level is illogical," he said. "When Iran was under sanctions, some countries raised their output and they caused the drop in oil prices. | |
"How can they expect Iran to co-operate now and pay the price?" He said. | |
Paul Stevens from the Royal Institute of International Affairs at Chatham House and an expert on the oil markets, said: "Before sanctions in 2012, Iran was producing around 4.4 million barrels a day. | |
"Just before sanctions were lifted in mid-January 2016, it was producing 2.8 million barrels per day. | |
"Officials have previously said they wish to increase it to four million barrels a day within the next three months. I think that is a wildly optimistic figure, but any increase still presents problems in terms of oversupply." | |
'Not credible' | 'Not credible' |
Mr Stevens said the Saudi-Russian deal had "no credibility whatsoever" and was a strategic move by Saudi Arabia. | |
He pointed out that Russia - not a member of the Opec cartel - had reneged on previous production agreements. | He pointed out that Russia - not a member of the Opec cartel - had reneged on previous production agreements. |
Sebastien Marlier, commodities analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said these talks marked the beginning of a "fraught, protracted negotiation process within Opec. Yet joint output cuts by both Opec members and Russia remain a distant prospect." | |
He, too, believed Saudi Arabia was playing a clever game: "It shows that they are willing to collaborate and are not stubbornly sticking to their painful strategy of flooding the market to evict higher-cost producers. | He, too, believed Saudi Arabia was playing a clever game: "It shows that they are willing to collaborate and are not stubbornly sticking to their painful strategy of flooding the market to evict higher-cost producers. |
"It shifts the burden of responsibility for refusing to cut production to arch-rival Iran. | "It shifts the burden of responsibility for refusing to cut production to arch-rival Iran. |
"Finally, it maintains the status quo while talks are ongoing, thereby continuing to press US shale and other struggling oil producers outside of Opec." | |
Tensions also remain between Saudi Arabia and Russia over Syria. | Tensions also remain between Saudi Arabia and Russia over Syria. |
Russia is supporting President Bashar al-Assad's regime, with help from Iran, while Saudi Arabia is backing opposition forces. |