<article><p class="lead">Opec production was the lowest on record in June, when three Mideast Gulf countries made additional voluntary cuts and others improved their output restraint.</p><p>Overall group output fell by 1.82mn b/d from May to 22.28mn b/d in June, the most depleted level since <i>Argus</i> began keeping records in January 1998.</p><p>The decline came as Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Kuwait pledged combined extra cuts that took their respective ceilings under the Opec+ deal down to 7.49mn b/d, 2.35mn b/d and 2.09mn b/d for the month. This commitment prompted Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to interrupt production at the recently restarted offshore 300,000 b/d Khafji field in the shared Neutral Zone throughout June.</p><p>Saudi Arabia cut crude output by 930,000 b/d from May to 7.57mn b/d, its lowest since July 2002. Sales reflected the decline, as exports <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2120257">fell by 683,000 b/d to 5.6mn b/d</a>, with 20-30pc cuts to nominations of some Asia-Pacific clients. Analysts said some of the June exports came from storage.</p><p>The three Mideast Gulf producers will <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2112383">not replicate their voluntary cuts in July</a>. Otherwise, the broader Opec+ group has extended its June cuts into this month. Using a largely October 2018 baseline, the 23-nation coalition aimed to reduce output by 9.7mn over May-June, and targets a 9.6mn b/d cut this month, with the slight change because non-Opec Mexico will no longer contribute.</p><p>The extension has come with a Saudi-led focus on individual countries' compliance. The Opec+ Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC), which will meet monthly to discuss conformity, found that Opec+ respected <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2115181">just 87pc of their May pledges</a> and that historical Opec over-producers Iraq and Nigeria again struggled to curb their output.</p><p>"We have no room whatsoever for lack of conformity," Saudi oil minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said on 8 June. "We have no stomach for any types of laxities in terms of self-imposed obligations that need to be attended to." Laggards were pushed to <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2115791">submit production plans</a> detailing how they will compensate for excess May output in the June-September period.</p><p>Production in Iraq and Nigeria fell sharply in June, although both still missed their targets. Iraqi output dropped by 350,000 b/d to its lowest since April 2015, and Nigerian production was the lowest since August 2016.</p><p>Baghdad's new oil minister Ihsan Ismael has instructed caps on federal exports, and state-owned marketing firm Somo asked some buyers to <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2113221">forego already contracted June volumes</a>. Nigerian state-owned NNPC's managing director Mele Kyari expects to reach full compliance with its 1.41mn b/d production quota <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2113110">by the middle of this month</a>, although export loading schedules for August show a level above Nigeria's <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2120371">output limit</a>.</p><p>Angola, where underinvestment and mature fields have limited production in the past, was just 71pc compliant in May and was asked to compensate. It improved adherence in June, when a 15-year production low of 1.15mn b/d made it 109pc compliant.</p><p>Venezuela contributed to the Opec June output drop, although it is excluded from the Opec+ deal. Internal production reports from state-owned PdV showed declines accelerating to <a href="https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2115026">as little as 300,000-350,000 b/d</a> in mid-June because of storage and export constraints caused by US sanctions.</p><p class="bylines">By Ruxandra Iordache</p><p><table class='tbl-excel'><tr><td class='tbl-header' colspan='3'>Opec wellhead production</td><td class='tbl-header tbl-right tbl-italic'></td><td class='tbl-header tbl-right tbl-italic'>mn b/d</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-columnheader tbl-bold tbl-left'></td><td class='tbl-columnheader tbl-bold tbl-center tbl-right'>June</td><td class='tbl-columnheader tbl-bold tbl-right'>May</td><td class='tbl-columnheader tbl-bold tbl-right'>June target</td><td class='tbl-columnheader tbl-bold tbl-right'>Compliance %</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-rowspace' colspan='5'></td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Saudi Arabia</td><td class='tbl-right'>7.57</td><td class='tbl-right'>8.50</td><td class='tbl-right'>8.49</td><td class='tbl-right'>137</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Iraq</td><td class='tbl-right'>3.75</td><td class='tbl-right'>4.10</td><td class='tbl-right'>3.59</td><td class='tbl-right'>85</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Kuwait</td><td class='tbl-right'>2.05</td><td class='tbl-right'>2.23</td><td class='tbl-right'>2.17</td><td class='tbl-right'>118</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>UAE</td><td class='tbl-right'>2.31</td><td class='tbl-right'>2.48</td><td class='tbl-right'>2.45</td><td class='tbl-right'>119</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Algeria</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.80</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.81</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.82</td><td class='tbl-right'>107</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Nigeria</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.54</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.58</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.41</td><td class='tbl-right'>69</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Angola</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.15</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.28</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.18</td><td class='tbl-right'>109</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Congo (Brazzaville)</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.30</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.28</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.25</td><td class='tbl-right'>34</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Gabon</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.21</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.19</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.14</td><td class='tbl-right'>-53</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Equatorial Guinea</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.13</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.09</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.10</td><td class='tbl-right'>-10</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left tbl-bold'>Opec 10</td><td class='tbl-right tbl-bold'>19.81</td><td class='tbl-right tbl-bold'>21.54</td><td class='tbl-right tbl-bold'>20.60</td><td class='tbl-right tbl-bold'>113</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Iran</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.98</td><td class='tbl-right'>1.93*</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Libya</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.09</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.08</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Venezuela</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.40</td><td class='tbl-right'>0.55</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-left'>Total Opec 13Ϯ</td><td class='tbl-right'>22.28</td><td class='tbl-right'>24.10</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td><td class='tbl-right'>na</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-notes tbl-left tbl-italic' colspan='5'>*revised</td></tr><tr><td class='tbl-notes tbl-left tbl-italic' colspan='5'>ϮIran, Libya and Venezuela are exempt from production targets</td></tr></table></p></article>