Scrapped OPEC+ April Meeting May Be Saudi Way Of Silencing Dissent On Oil Cuts

 | Mar 19, 2019 10:30

Saudi Arabia gives the impression that the alliance of 25 oil producers it leads with Russia will be ruthless in carrying out deep production cuts over the next three months, and the market bought the portrayal by pushing U.S. crude up to just short of $60 per barrel. While Riyadh’s intent to drain the market of excess oil is clear, its decision to cancel OPEC’s April meeting suggests a desire to hide any feet-dragging by the rest of the cartel over the cuts.

Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih told a news conference in the Azerbaijan city of Baku yesterday that global oil supplies were still plentiful and production cuts may have to continue till the end of the first half—and as such, it made sense for the 15-member OPEC group to stick to a later meeting scheduled in June and skip the one next month.

Falih’s Russian counterpart Alexander Novak, also in Baku to review the impact of their output cuts since January under the OPEC+ alliance, which includes another ten countries outside the cartel, agreed. Novak also promised Russia would step up cuts in the coming months after his Saudi colleague remarked that Riyadh alone couldn’t carry the excess burden.