OPEC+ member states lined up on Oct. 16 to endorse the steep cut to its output target agreed this month after the White House, stepping up a war of words with Saudi Arabia, accused Riyadh of coercing some other nations into supporting the move.
The U.S. last week said the cut would boost Russia’s foreign earnings and suggested it had been engineered for political reasons by Saudi Arabia, which on Oct. 16 denied it was supporting Moscow in its invasion of Ukraine.
Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz said the kingdom was working hard to support stability and balance in oil markets, including establishing and maintaining agreement of the OPEC+ alliance that comprises OPEC and other major producers including Russia.
The kingdom’s defense minister and King Salman’s son, Prince Khalid bin Salman, also said the Oct. 5 decision to reduce output by 2 million bbl/d—taken despite oil markets being tight—was unanimous and based on economic factors.
His comments were backed by ministers of several OPEC+ member states including the United Arab Emirates.
The Gulf state’s energy minister, Suhail al-Mazrouei, wrote on Twitter: “I would like to clarify that the latest OPEC+ decision, which was unanimously approved, was a pure technical decision, with NO political intentions whatsoever.”
His comment followed a statement from Iraq's state oil marketer SOMO.
“There is complete consensus among OPEC+ countries that the best approach in dealing with the oil market conditions during the current period of uncertainty and lack of clarity is a pre-emptive approach that supports market stability and provides the guidance needed for the future,” a SOMO statement said.
Kuwait Petroleum Corp. CEO Nawaf Saud al-Sabah also welcomed the decision by OPEC+ and said the country was keen to maintain a balanced oil markets, state news agency KUNA reported.
Oman and Bahrain said in separate statements that OPEC had agreed unanimously on the reduction.
Algerian energy minister Mohamed Arkab, meanwhile, called the decision "historic" and said that he and OPEC Secretary General Haitham Al Ghais expressed full confidence in it, Algeria's Ennahar TV reported.
Ghais later told a news conference that the organization targeted a balance between supply and demand rather than a specific price.
In a statement to Reuters on Monday, Arkab said the OPEC+ decision, was “a purely technical response based on purely economic considerations,” adding that it was adopted unanimously.
Oil inventories in major economies are lower than when OPEC has cut output in the past.
Some analysts have said that recent volatility in crude markets could be remedied by a cut that would help to attract investors to an underperforming market.
U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby on Thursday said that “more than one” OPEC member had felt coerced by Saudi Arabia into the vote, adding that the cut would also increase Russia’s revenue and blunt the effectiveness of sanctions imposed over its February invasion of Ukraine.
King Salman said in an address to the kingdom’s advisory Shura Council that the country was a mediator of peace and highlighted the crown prince's initiative to release prisoners of war from Russia last month, state news agency SPA reported.
Khalid bin Salman on Oct. 16 said he was “astonished” by claims his country was “standing with Russia in its war with Ukraine.”
“It is telling that these false accusations did not come from the Ukrainian government,” he wrote on Twitter.
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