OPEC production falls to 30 MPD in January
Crude oil production from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries fell to 30.45 million barrels per day in January from 30.65 million barrels per day in December led by a further drop in volumes from Saudi Arabia.
OPEC and oil industry officials and analysts said that Saudi Arabia reduced output to 9.25 million bpd in January from 9.45 million barrels per day in December. The January level was the lowest since an estimated 9.05 million barrels per day in May 2011.
Lower Saudi output in recent months largely reflected the seasonal reduction in direct burning of crude oil for electricity. The January estimate is down some 750,000 barrels per day from the recent production peak last August.
Mr John Kingston Platts global director of news said that "This report is yet another affirmation that Saudi is willing to narrow what had looked like a big gap between supply and demand almost completely from its own production. All data a few months ago was pointing to a gap that looked large now it's a lot smaller. And the biggest factor in closing that gap has been a reduction from Saudi Arabia."
In mid January, Mr Ibrahim al-Muhanna an adviser to Saudi oil minister Ali Naimi rebutted any suggestion that the kingdom had cut output in order to boost oil prices. Saudi production was being driven primarily by customer needs including seasonally variable domestic demand which had weakened over the previous quarter from the summer peak.
The other smaller output reductions came from Algeria, Kuwait, Qatar and Libya, the latter affected by a strike at the Zueitina terminal which damped exports. Combined, the total volume of output decreases were 300,000 barrel per day. However, this was partly offset by production increases totaling 100,000 barrels per day from Angola, Iraq and Nigeria.
Iraqi output was slightly higher at around 3 million barrels per day on the back of an increase in overall exports despite rough weather in the Persian Gulf. But exports from the north to Ceyhan in Turkey fell in January to the lowest level in 5 years as repeated sabotage by insurgents reduced flows through the export pipeline to the Turkish Mediterranean.
In addition, the long running dispute between Baghdad and the Kurdistan Regional Government intensified, with the result that no oil produced in Iraqi Kurdistan is being exported via the pipeline. In Nigeria, where Eni lifted a 2 month force majeure on Brass River exports, output was approximately 70,000 barrels per day higher.
The January production total leaves OPEC output 450,000 barrels per day greater than the oil producing organization's notional 30 million bpd output ceiling in place since January 2012.
Source - Trade Arabia