The odds of an oil production deal look increasingly grim
A TECHNICAL meeting that was supposed to iron out some wrinkles for a deal to cut oil production ended in acrimony over the weekend, and Opec's (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) effort at coordination could be at yet another impasse.
Following the Algiers agreement at the end of September, a tentative deal that called for a collective reduction in oil output in the range of 200,000 to 700,000 barrels per day, Opec scheduled a meeting on Oct 28-29 in Vienna to put some meat on the bones of the pact so that it could be officially sealed at the end of November.
But after weeks of papering over differences between its members and trying to put some positive spin on the prospects for a deal, Opec not only failed to agree on individual production quotas, but its members also bickered over data and even which countries are supposed to participate. The group spent two days negotiating, and came away with nothing more than a statement that said they would continue talking.
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