Saudi Arabia has offered extra oil supplies to
its main customers in the US, Europe and Asia through till the end
of the year, aimed at bringing down skyrocketing prices.
“The current price is too high,” a senior
Gulf-based oil official told the Financial Times. “We would like to
see oil prices back to $100 a barrel.”
Last month Riyadh produced as much as 9.9m
barrel a day, and now it is reportedly considering boosting oil
output to a 30-year high of 10m barrel a day. The move indicates
that the world largest oil exporter is concerned over the impact of
high oil prices on global economic growth.
The Group of Seven finance ministers called on oil exporters to
boost production in August, but Saudi authorities were
unenthusiastic.
“Saudi Arabia as well as other OPEC countries
are not interested in decreasing oil prices, so they won’t
significantly boost production,” says Grigory Birg, chief analyst
at Investcafe. He noted that OPEC kept output quotas unchanged in
June.
The price of benchmark Brent crude has
skyrocketed by 33% from mid-June to a peak of $117.95 a barrel on
Friday. On Monday oil price dropped $4 in just four minutes amid
rumors the US is going to release oil from its reserves, but later
recovered.
“Also weakening demand from Europe and China’s
slowdown would keep prices down,” Birg added. “Saudi Arabia and
other exporters would base their production volumes on demand,
trying to keep the prices close to current levels”.
Meanwhile concerns that tensions in the region
could result in supply disruption still affect oil prices, pushing
the up. An EU ban on Iranian crude imports came into force on July
1, and Iran threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz. The waterway
accounts for more than a third of the world's seaborne oil exports
from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait, Iraq, the UAE and Qatar.
“If military action begins, the
price would be as it was in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraqi war”,
Sergey Vakhrameev, analyst at the Metropol investment company told
RT. “Then they would go down, as it was when the US began to convoy
tankers to secure exports through Hormuz”.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in August opened new
pipelines bypassing the Strait of Hormuz to secure at least a part
of their daily exports.
But Iranian tension isn’t the only factor that
endangers oil supplies. Oil markets are agog with the Syrian
conflict dragging in Turkey, Qatar, UAE and Lebanon as well as
anti-US protest across the region.
http://rt.com/business/news/saudi-oil-output-boost-463/