世界石油


(彭博社)“OPEC+选择在今年上半年坚持石油减产,导致全球市场紧张,并可能推高油价。

根据该组织网站上发布的声明,由沙特阿拉伯领导的一个主要成员小组在周三的在线审查会议上建议不要改变政策。这意味着大约 2 MMbpd 的产量限制将持续到 6 月底。

欧佩克及其合作伙伴的减产,加上燃料需求的惊人弹性,帮助将伦敦原油价格推升至每桶近 90 美元,为今年的最高水平。中东持续的冲突也支撑着原油期货。

巴黎国际能源署表示,通过维持限制措施,欧佩克+有望确保全球石油市场在第二季度保持小幅赤字。摩根大通警告称,短缺可能导致油价升至每桶 100 美元。

声明称,部长级联合监测委员会“将继续密切评估市场状况”,OPEC+成员国确认“随时准备采取额外措施”。

这可能会让那些仍因多年来猖獗的通货膨胀而痛苦的消费者感到不安,并使寻求放松货币政策的央行工作变得更加复杂。然而,对于沙特及其盟友来说,这次集会支撑了至关重要的政府收入。

截至伦敦下午 1:09,全球基准布伦特原油价格上涨 1%,至 89.80 美元。

“毫无疑问,这是一个基础稳固的市场,”咨询公司 Rapidan Energy Group 的创始人、前白宫顾问鲍勃·麦克纳利 (Bob McNally) 在接受彭博电视台采访时表示。

尽管一些主要成员(尤其是伊拉克和哈萨克斯坦)尚未执行其商定的减产协议,但该组织的减产措施已经收紧了市场。

根据闭幕声明,在周三的委员会会议上再次敦促成员们遵守其承诺。伊拉克和哈萨克斯坦已承诺进一步减产以弥补产量过剩,并被要求在四月底之前提交详细计划。

两国在交付方面的记录参差不齐。巴格达在寻求收入来重建支离破碎的经济时,经常对欧佩克+的产量限制感到愤怒。

与沙特共同领导OPEC+的俄罗斯的表现也好坏参半。该国迟来地实施了一年前承诺的原油减产,但今年商定的出口削减的兑现情况尚不清楚。

尽管柴油等燃料的运输量有所下降,但这可能与乌克兰无人机袭击俄罗斯炼油厂有关。与此同时,其原油出口正在反弹。俄罗斯总统弗拉基米尔·普京一直在利用石油收入继续对乌克兰发动战争。

由 22 国组成的 OPEC+ 联盟将于 6 月 1 日在维也纳总部齐聚,决定是否继续将减产措施延续到今年下半年。 JMMC 将在同一天再次召开会议,代表部长们审查市场。

尽管摩根大通和渣打银行等一些预测人士认为该联盟可以放松减产并恢复生产,但其他人则信心不足。国际能源署的估计显示,如果欧佩克+放松减产,世界市场将重新陷入盈余。

沙特能源部长阿卜杜勒阿齐兹·本·萨勒曼亲王经常敦促其他成员国在恢复中断的供应方面保持谨慎。

但邻国阿拉伯联合酋长国似乎渴望部署新安装的产能,并且此前曾与利雅得就使用权发生冲突。阿布扎比在本周的一份报告中指出欧佩克+的上限是其不得不降低经济增长预测的原因。

Rapidan 的麦克纳利表示,该团体六月的聚会承诺将是“积极的”。

 

 


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – OPEC+ chose to stick with oil production cuts for the first half of the year, keeping global markets tight and potentially sending prices higher.

A panel of key members led by Saudi Arabia recommended no policy changes at an online review meeting on Wednesday, according to a statement posted on the group’s website. That means roughly 2 MMbpd of production curbs will remain in place until the end of June.

The cuts by OPEC and its partners, combined with surprisingly resilient fuel demand, have helped push crude prices to almost $90 a bbl in London, the highest level this year. Ongoing conflict in the Middle East is also propping up crude futures.

By keeping the curbs in place, OPEC+ looks set to ensure that global oil markets remain in a slight deficit during the second quarter, according to the International Energy Agency in Paris. The shortfall could send oil prices toward $100 a bbl, JPMorgan Chase & Co. has warned.

The Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee “will continue to closely assess market conditions” and OPEC+ members confirmed “their readiness to take additional measures at any time,” according to the statement.

That could spell discomfort for consumers still smarting from years of rampant inflation and complicate the job of central banks seeking to loosen monetary policy. However, for the Saudis and its allies, the rally shores up vital government revenues.

Global benchmark Brent crude traded 1% higher at $89.80 by 1:09 p.m. in London.

“It is a market that is on firm fundamental footing, no question,” Bob McNally, founder of consultants Rapidan Energy Group and a former White House adviser, said in a Bloomberg Television interview.

The group’s production cuts have managed to tighten the market even though some key members — notably Iraq and Kazakhstan — haven’t implemented their agreed reductions.

Members were once again urged to adhere to their commitments at Wednesday’s committee meeting, according to the closing statement. Iraq and Kazakhstan, who have pledged additional cutbacks to compensate for overproducing, were asked to submit detailed plans on this by the end of April.

The two countries have a patchy track record when it comes to delivery. Baghdad has often chafed against OPEC+ output limits as it seeks revenues to rebuild a shattered economy.

Russia, which jointly leads OPEC+ with the Saudis, has also shown a mixed performance. The country belatedly implemented crude oil production cuts promised a year ago, but its delivery of export reductions agreed for this year is less clear.

While its shipments of fuels like diesel have fallen, this may be linked to Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian refineries. Meanwhile, its exports of crude are rebounding. President Vladimir Putin has been using oil revenues to continue waging war against Ukraine.

The full 22-nation OPEC+ alliance will gather at its Vienna headquarters on June 1 to decide whether to continue the supply cuts into the second half of the year. The JMMC will convene again the same day, to review markets on behalf of ministers.

While some forecasters such as JPMorgan and Standard Chartered Plc believe the alliance can relax the cuts and restore production, others are less confident. Estimates from the IEA show that if OPEC+ eases the cutbacks, world markets will tip back into surplus.

Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman has often urged fellow members to remain cautious in reviving halted supplies.

But neighboring United Arab Emirates appears eager to deploy newly installed production capacity and has on prior occasions clashed with Riyadh over the right to use it. Abu Dhabi pointed to the OPEC+ caps in a report this week as a reason why it had to lower economic growth projections.

Rapidan’s McNally said the group’s gathering in June promises to be “lively.”