Opec delivering on agreed oil output cuts: Kuwait
[KUWAIT CITY] The Opec oil cartel has implemented more than 90 per cent of its agreed output cuts aimed at curbing a glut on world markets, Kuwait's oil minister said on Monday.
Opec and non-Opec producers including Russia agreed late last year to reduce output by about 1.8 million barrels per day in a landmark deal that followed a sharp drop in oil prices.
"Opec compliance with the output cuts is excellent ... Compliance has reached 92 per cent," said Kuwaiti oil minister Essam al-Marzouk, who chairs a committee tasked with monitoring the agreement.
Non-Opec producers had delivered on more than half of their pledged production reductions, he told reporters on the sidelines of a conference in Kuwait City.
Mr Marzouk attributed the relatively low non-Opec implementation rate to previously agreed export commitments.
"We understand that the compliance of non-Opec producers will be gradual through the months of April and May," said Mr Marzouk.
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"We hope for full compliance from all producers," he added.
Global oil prices fell from more than US$100 a barrel in June 2014 to near 13-year lows of less than US$30 in early 2016, hitting the public finances of many oil producing nations.
They have since bounced back above US$50 following the output cuts that took effect at the start of 2017.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was down nine cents at US$53.77 per barrel in Asian trade on Monday while Brent North Sea slipped five US cents to US$56.65.
The Paris-based International Energy Agency reported last week a compliance rate of 90 per cent by Opec countries, calling it "a record".
The five-member Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee headed by Kuwait will meet in the emirate next month to re-assess compliance with the pledged cuts.
AFP
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