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Saudi Arabia ready to work with others to stabilise crude market

Opec has been urging non-member producers such as Russia to join it in cutting supply, but so far, non-Opec countries have refused and Opec in turn has declined to reduce its supplies

Reuters
Khobar

Saudi Arabia’s cabinet said yesterday it was ready to cooperate with Opec and non-Opec countries to achieve market stability, days before Opec meets to review its year-long policy of not supporting prices.
Oil prices jumped $1 a barrel after the comments, even though they repeated what Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in a speech last week.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries meets on December 4.
“The council (of ministers) ... stressed the kingdom’s role in (achieving) the stability of the oil market and its continuous readiness and efforts to cooperate with all Opec and non-Opec countries to maintain the stability of the market and prices,” the cabinet said.
Opec has been urging non-member producers such as Russia to join it in cutting supply to reduce a glut that has more than halved prices since mid-2014. So far, non-Opec countries have refused and Opec in turn has declined to reduce its supplies.
Algeria’s prime minister, in a speech at the Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF) Summit in Tehran, urged leading oil market players to control output levels.
“The main players in the petroleum market must certainly reach an agreement about the levels of production,” Algerian Prime Minister Abdelmalek Sellal said.
“If the petroleum market is not controlled, it will witness strong volatility for prices,” he added, warning that this would hurt the “interests of producers and consumers and the whole petroleum industry”.
Barring a shift in stance from Russia, the chance of such action still looks remote and Opec delegates say Opec is unlikely to cut output alone.
A senior Gulf Opec delegate said earlier this month Opec was likely to stick to the no-cut policy if major non-Opec producers are not willing to help.
Oil traders closely watch any comment from Saudi Arabia’s political leadership for signs it might revert from its policy of recovering market share to its old policy, dropped in November 2014, of defending oil prices by cutting output.
The weekly Saudi cabinet meeting statement typically mentions energy policy only in the context of a major speech by al-Naimi. Its statement yesterday paraphrased a speech al-Naimi gave in Bahrain on Thursday.


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