OPEC+ ministers met this weekend to weigh higher production quotas in a bid to cap oil prices that have surged since the Iran war effectively choked off Gulf crude shipments.
However, even if the group members vow to ramp up output by thousands of barrels per day, analysts say that geopolitical realities mean they probably won’t move the needle on prices.
With the crucial Strait of Hormuz shut since US and Israeli attacks on Iran in late February, oil prices have nearly doubled, igniting inflation pressures worldwide.
Ministers from the 21 member states of OPEC+, the main oil producing nations and their allies, are holding their quarterly meeting online.
The group is likely to beef up its production quotas by “188,000 barrels a day”, said Jorge Leon, analyst at Rystad Energy, similar to recent increases.
However, in reality, only seven members – Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman – have the capacity to do so.
Tehran’s threats of retaliatory attacks to US and Israeli strikes have virtually blocked the vital Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a fifth of global oil and gas supplies normally pass.
That is equivalent to about 20mn barrels a day.
With key Gulf producers shut out of the global market, pledges to raise output in a bid to ease spiralling prices are unlikely to sway traders.
“Any announced production increases or changes to output targets will have limited practical value,” said Ole Hansen, a commodities analyst at Saxo Bank. “There is very little OPEC can do.”
OPEC+ itself says daily production has plummeted to just 33mn barrels a day as tankers remain stuck, compared to nearly 43mn before the conflict.
A US blockade on Iranian ports means “it will be even less than that” in reality, said Homayoun Falakshahi, head of crude oil analysis at data firm Kpler.
The United Arab Emirates’s recent decision to quit OPEC further saps away at the cartel’s influence, given its huge excess production capacity.
And Abu Dhabi has made clear it wants to boost output.
“They don’t want to be dictated to, they want to maximise their revenues,” said Lawrence Haar, a lecturer in finance at the University of Brighton in England.
And the group risks seeing other countries follow the UAE’s example.
“If Iraq were to leave, it could mark the end of OPEC+,” Falakshahi said.
Saudi Arabia, by far the cartel’s most influential member, “is going to do what it takes to stop anyone else from leaving”, Falakshahi predicted.
That could translate into more flexible output quotas or decreased penalties for any excess production.
However, “for now, the compensation framework has effectively become irrelevant due to widespread production shut-ins”, Hansen said.
As a result, the Iran war has largely neutralised the group’s stated mission “to secure an efficient, economic and regular supply of petroleum to consumers, and a steady income to producers”.
For Falakshahi, the only factor limiting further oil price spikes at the moment is China, “which is buying less oil than normal” by tapping into its vast strategic reserves.