Markets

Russia, OPEC to Sign Partnership Deal

  • Russia, OPEC to Sign Partnership Deal

Russia is planning to sign a partnership agreement with Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), Energy Minister Alexander Novak said on Monday.

Novak said the deal would be discussed at the OPEC Dec. 6 meeting.

NAN reports that on Sept. 11, Novak said that he believed OPEC and their allies within the production cut alliance should ink an agreement on the group’s broader cooperation in December so that the new partnership format comes in force from Jan. 1.

“It will be expedient to sign it in […] early December so that it comes in force from Jan. 1,” Novak told newsmen.

The group plans to institutionalise and make permanent their current alliance, which began in late 2016.

The current production cut agreement, in force from January 2017, has envisaged the group to remove a combined 1.8 million b/d of crude from the market to help the market rebalancing.

The move helped to boost oil prices from a two-year slump.

A draft charter for the broader, permanent cooperation seen last week by S&P Global Platts calls on ministers of the 24-country producer coalition to meet at least once a year to discuss output policy and review supply and demand.

Novak’s comments signaled Russia fully supporting OPEC’s plans to sign a framework agreement in December, during the Vienna general meeting by OPEC and non-OPEC countries taking part in the deal.

The broader cooperation is seen as an evolution to the current production cut deal, Novak said, when asked if the current production cut agreements could be prolong into 2019.

“They are linked. The broader cooperation agreement is developing from the current deal, with some changes in the format,” he said, speaking on the sidelines of a major economic event in Vladivostok.

Novak also did not rule out that some further adjustments to the current production cut agreement are possible later this year, should the market require additional joint actions amid concerns over oil supply shortages due to U.S. sanctions against Iran, as well as supply risks from other countries such as Libya or Venezuela.

“We’re interested in the stable market and avoiding misbalances in either direction,” Novak said. “If we see that we need to increase output, such decisions could be discussed,” he said.

It is too early, though, to speak about the concrete decisions at the moment, he added.

“Now we need to analyse the results of three months, July-September, and then the forecast for the fourth quarter and the first quarter of 2019.

“After that we’ll discuss concrete proposals,” he said.

Samed Olukoya

Is the CEO and Founder of Investors King Limited. He is a seasoned foreign exchange research analyst and a published author on Yahoo Finance, Business Insider, Nasdaq, Entrepreneur.com, Investorplace, and other prominent platforms. With over two decades of experience in global financial markets, Olukoya is well-recognized in the industry.

Share
Published by
Samed Olukoya

Recent Posts

Discordant Tunes Greet 50% Tariff Hike As Subscribers Threaten To Sue NCC

Nigerians have expressed displeasure over the decision of the Nigerian Communications Commission to increase tariffs…

12 hours ago

Beatrice Ekweremadu Returns to Nigeria After Serving Sentence in UK

Mrs. Beatrice Ekweremadu, wife of former Deputy Senate President Senator Ike Ekweremadu, has reportedly returned…

12 hours ago

Nigeria Expands Refining Capacity with MRO Energy’s Delta State Refinery

The Federal Government has taken another step toward boosting Nigeria’s refining capacity with the approval…

13 hours ago

Eko DisCo Set for Transformation as Transgrid Enerco Signs Historic 60% Acquisition Agreement

Transgrid Enerco Limited has signed a Share Purchase Agreement (SPA) to acquire a 60% equity…

13 hours ago

Metering Gap Exceeds 7 Million Despite Multilateral Loans and Government Funds

Despite interventions by the Federal Government and multilateral lenders amounting to over N1.5 trillion, Nigeria’s…

14 hours ago

Petrol Prices Surge to N990 in Abuja, N960 in Lagos as Oil Tops $80 Per Barrel

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) has increased the pump price of petrol at…

15 hours ago