Opec+ output stays well below target

  • : Crude oil
  • 22/08/12

Production rose by 500,000 b/d in July but still fell far short of the group's monthly quota, writes Ruxandra Iordache

Opec+ deal participants collectively raised their crude output by 500,000 b/d in July as part of the final unwinding of their Covid-19 supply cuts.

But the group's production of 38.70mn b/d was still 2.75mn b/d below its quotas for the month, Argus finds. Dwindling spare capacity, under-investment and sabotage have crippled the coalition's ability to return the 9.7mn b/d it removed from the market in May 2020. Opec+ will nominally complete that process this month, when its collective ceiling will rise by another 648,000 b/d. It has agreed to lift output by a further 100,000 b/d, shared pro rata, in September.

Among Opec members, Saudi Arabia saw the highest monthly output increase in July, made possible by high export levels and a seasonal rise in domestic crude burn for power generation to meet soaring air-conditioning needs. Saudi seaborne exports surged by 550,000 b/d on the month to around 7.37mn b/d in July. Analysts say that between 60,000 b/d and 120,000 b/d of these shipments may have emerged from stocks. Saudi Arabia can take its production up to 11mn b/d this month — a level it has reached only twice, under its self-reported submissions to the Joint Oil Data Initiative covering January 2002-May 2022. Kuwait also sharply boosted exports to 1.86mn b/d, after months of prioritising refinery run increases.

Nigeria underperformed in July. Its output was 570,000 b/d under the month's quota. Oil minister Timipre Sylva said in late June that Abuja hoped to meet its production target by the end of August, but made no headway in July when force majeure was in place at the Bonny Light export terminal and output of the Forcados and Bonga crude streams was reduced.

Libya, which is exempt from the Opec+ deal, raised output by 70,000 b/d after lifting force majeure restrictions at all oil fields and terminals in mid-July. Output has been recovering since, with exports resuming from the Es Sider, Ras Lanuf, Mellitah and Zueitina terminals, although Libya's political divisions continue to cast a shadow over the long-term stability of the country's oil sector.

Venezuelan production declined by 60,000 b/d, after a fire knocked out a natural gas pipeline key to the Jose refining and petrochemical complex. Caracas has been struggling to process recent Iranian crude shipments sent to state-owned PdV's 140,000 b/d El Palito refinery, which have had to be rerouted. Analysts say sanctioned Venezuelan and Iranian grades are facing stiff competition from heavily discounted Russian crude on offer to refiners in Asia-Pacific.

Falling short

Non-Opec output rose by 220,000 b/d in July. Russian production rose marginally on the month but was still over 1mn b/d below its country target. Refinery consumption has increased in recent months, and product stocks in Russiarose by more than 500,000 bl in July, largely of diesel. Crude exports fell by just over 200,000 b/d, consisting mostly of largely Urals, in July, but seem to be recovering in August, preliminary data from Vortexa indicate.

A halt to Russian crude shipments through the southern arm of the Druzhba pipeline from 4 August appeared to have been resolved by 10 August. The pipeline branch serves Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic.

Kazakhstan restored production at the offshore Kashagan field in mid-July, pushing the country's output to near 1.4mn b/d. But Kashagan's return was cut short by a gas leak discovered on 3 August, reducing output by more than 200,000 b/d. The field resumed production on the night of 9-10 August. Kazakhstan, the non-Opec group's second-largest producer, has been falling sharply behind its quota since March. The return of Azerbaijan's Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli project from maintenance in late June added 40,000 b/d.

Opec+ wellhead productionmn b/d
JulyJune*July target± Target
Opec 1025.2224.9426.28-1.06
Non-Opec 913.4813.2615.18-1.70
Total38.7038.2041.45-2.75
Opec
Saudi Arabia10.8010.6310.83-0.03
Iraq4.534.504.58-0.05
Kuwait2.792.732.770.02
UAE3.123.083.13-0.01
Algeria1.021.011.04-0.02
Nigeria1.231.261.80-0.57
Angola1.171.181.50-0.33
Congo (Brazzaville)0.250.260.32-0.07
Gabon0.210.200.180.03
Equatorial Guinea0.100.090.13-0.03
Opec 1025.2224.9426.28-1.06
Iran2.562.56nana
Libya0.670.60nana
Venezuela0.650.71nana
Total Opec 13†29.1028.81nana
Non-Opec
Russia9.809.7810.83-1.03
Oman0.870.850.870.00
Azerbaijan0.560.520.71-0.14
Kazakhstan1.381.211.68-0.30
Malaysia0.390.400.59-0.19
Bahrain0.200.200.200.00
Brunei0.070.070.10-0.03
Sudan0.060.060.07-0.01
South Sudan0.150.160.130.02
Total non-Opec†13.4813.2615.18-1.70
*revised figures
†Iran, Libya and Venezuela are exempt from the agreement

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