The global market has the capacity to absorb higher oil prices, Minister of Energy, Industry and Mineral Resources Khaled Al-Faleh has said. Faleh’s statement at a meeting of oil producers in Jeddah on Friday came as crude hit the highest level in more than three years.
The statement drew a swift reaction from US President Donald Trump who accused OPEC of inflating prices. “Looks like OPEC is at it again,” Trump tweeted. Oil has rebounded to over $70 a barrel, after prices crashed to as low as $26 in January 2016.
“I have not seen any impact on demand with current prices,” Faleh told reporters, ahead of a ministerial committee for OPEC and non-OPEC producers. “Reduced energy intensity and higher productivity globally of energy input leads me to think that there is the capacity to absorb higher prices,” he said.
The ministerial committee said Friday that crude inventory levels have been reduced but were still higher than desired. Stockpiles were at 2.83 billion barrels, down from their peak of 3.12 billion barrels two years ago, it said in a statement.
Gunning for $80bln
Analysts believe Saudi Arabia, the world’s top crude exporter, aims to see much higher oil prices to overcome its domestic financial difficulties and raise the valuation of state oil giant Aramco ahead of a planned five-percent IPO.
After prices hit $70 a barrel, the Kingdom “is thought to be unofficially gunning for $80 a barrel, with some even suggesting that it favors a return to $100 (a barrel) oil”, Stephen Brennock of PVM Oil Associates said. “As well as helping to reduce the Saudi government balance sheet, a further spike in prices would act as a boon for the impending Aramco IPO,” Brennock said.
“This is why Saudi Arabia is keeping the supply of oil tight,” Commerzbank said. Faleh on Friday insisted the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries does not have a price target for oil.
“We never have a price target … Prices are determined by the market,” said Faleh who warned against the danger of price fluctuations, saying “volatility is our enemy.”
Saudi-Russia ‘consensus’
Russia, the world’s top oil producer, on Friday gave its backing to the idea of establishing an enduring alliance for producers to continue their control of the market. “We have created a very solid foundation for cooperation between OPEC and non-OPEC countries in the future even beyond the declaration of cooperation,” Russia Energy Minister Alexander Novak told reporters in Jeddah.
Saudi Arabia said a “consensus” was emerging for a long-term cooperation agreement. OPEC and non-OPEC producers struck a deal in late 2016 to trim production by 1.8 million barrels per day to reduce a global glut that sent prices crashing.
The deal, which is due to run out at the end of this year, has helped boost oil prices to above $70 a barrel from below $30 in early 2016. The recovery has also been fueled by geopolitical tensions, Trump’s threat to reimpose sanctions on Iran and production problems in Venezuela, Nigeria and Libya. — With inputs from AFP