Nigeria's recovery lifts OPEC's June output to highest
Nigeria’s
gradual oil sector recovery following a period of respite from
militancy has boosted crude supply from the Organisation for Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) from 32.57 million barrels per day in May to
32.82 million bpd in June.
The
record, based on survey of shipping data and information from industry
sources, according to Reuters, was equally aided by activities in Iran
and other Gulf members, as higher supply from major Middle East
producers, except Iraq, underlined their focus on market share.
Price
recovery going up to $50 a barrel has reduced the urgency to prop up
the market as April negotiations among producers to freeze output
failed. The June figure would be less than the average demand that OPEC
expects for its crude in the third quarter.
This
suggests that demand could exceed supply in the coming months if OPEC
does not pump more than current levels. Reuters cited an analyst at
Commerzbank in Frankfurt, Carsten Fritsch, as saying: “We could see a
slight supply deficit - it depends on further development of unplanned
outages.”
Supply
has surged since OPEC abandoned its historic role of cutting supply to
prop up prices in 2014. June’s biggest increase of 150,000 bpd came
from Nigeria, where output had shrunk to its lowest in over 20 years due
to attacks on oil facilities.
Iran
also boosted supply after the West lifted sanctions in January, while
each of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates increased supply by
50,000 bpd, according to the survey. Saudi output edged up to 10.30
million bpd due to higher crude use in power plants to meet
air-conditioning needs.
Similarly,
Libya increased output by 40,000 bpd after it reopened the Marsa al
Hariga export terminal in late May, and the supply is still a fraction
of the pre-conflict rate.
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