A supertanker berths at Saudi Aramco’s Ras Tanura Sea Island Terminal, part of the Port of Ras Tanura, the world’s largest crude oil export terminal complex (file). Sources have indicated that Riyadh is unwilling to shoulder any oil output cut unilaterally and that any cut has to be a collective one by all Opec members.

Reuters/Dubai

 

Saudi Arabia supplied less crude oil to the market in September than a month earlier, an industry source said yesterday, at a time when some Opec members are calling on the top oil exporter to cut back output to lift prices.

Brent rose above $85 a barrel on the news, though it was still trading not far from its lowest in four years.

Crude supplies from the Opec heavyweight fell by some 328,000 bpd, to 9.36mn bpd in September, from 9.688mn bpd in August, the source said.

Supply to the market—both domestically and for exports—may differ from production depending on the movement of barrels in and out of storage.

The source did not give a reason for the drop in crude supply in September. But the kingdom typically burns less crude for power generation when the weather starts to cool, which may free up more oil for export in the coming months, analysts say.

Saudi oil use for power generation fell to 769,000 bpd in August, from 899,000 in July, according to official figures released earlier this week.

The fall in September’s crude supplies might have also been a way to compensate for the extra barrels taken out of storage in August when Saudi’s supplies were higher than its output. September output was 9.70mn bpd, up from 9.597mn bpd in August.

“I don’t interpret this as a move to tighten up the market—that wouldn’t make sense ahead of the Opec meeting,” said Bjarne Schieldrop, chief commodity analyst at SEB in Oslo. “Saudi Arabia does not want to make any substantial cuts on its own.”

Few Opec members would want the most influential member of the group to cut production to support oil prices, a failed policy that Riyadh adopted in the 1980s but is unwilling to go down the same road again now.

Opec’s Gulf Arab producers can tolerate lower prices. Saudi Arabia has been quietly signalling that it is comfortable with prices below $90 and has been slashing its crude prices to Asian customers to compete for market share.

Sources have indicated that Riyadh is unwilling to shoulder any output cut unilaterally and that any cut has to be a collective one by all Opec members.

Saudi Arabia is likely to keep its oil production steady throughout the rest of the year as world oil consumption is expected to rise and domestic demand for crude to ease during the winter, an industry source told Reuters last month.

Saudi crude exports fell in August to 6.663mn bpd for the fourth month in a row to their lowest levels in three years, as the world’s largest oil exporter fights for market share amid weak demand and ample supplies from rival producers.

September exports figures were not available yet on the website of the Joint Organisations Data Initiative (JODI).

Industry observers see Saudi crude output at around 9.5mn to 9.6mn bpd in the coming months when seasonal demand picks up. Saudi exports will probably stay around 6.9mn bpd to 7.1mn bpd until December, they say.

Saudi crude exports have been sliding in the past few months as shale oil squeezes its oil out of US markets and as demand in Asia, particularly in China, has been slower than expected.

Opec meets to review policy on November 27. So far Gulf members of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries have indicated their reluctance to cut output to lift prices.

Libya’s Opec governor told Reuters on Wednesday that Opec should cut its oil output by at least 500,000 bpd.

But Libya is the only one of four African Opec members calling for a supply cut.

Traditional price hawk Iran, in a shift of tack, has said it also can live with lower oil prices, reducing the likelihood of any collective cut in Opec output to support prices.

 

 

 

 

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