Sunday, June 30, 2013

Opec Pumps Less Oil In June

 
 LONDON: Opec crude output has fallen in June due to disruptions in Libya and Nigeria, a survey found yesterday, inadvertently bringing supply closer to the organisation’s target. Supply from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has averaged 30.38 million barrels per day (b/d), down from a revised 30.46 million b/d in May, the survey of shipping data and sources at oil firms, Opec and consultants found.

The survey shows violence is making African producers Opec’s weakest supply link and the ambitious plans of Iraq, its second-largest producer, to expand exports are facing headwinds. In June, largely involuntary curbs by smaller Opec producers have outweighed extra crude from its top exporter, Saudi Arabia, which has ramped up supply in response to a seasonally higher requirement for crude in domestic power plants.
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“It’s Nigeria, Libya and Angola mainly,” said a participant in the survey who declined to be identified. “This decline should support prices and you could make a case for it continuing for the next few months.”

Opec’s June output is the lowest since March 2013, when the group pumped 30.18 million b/d, according surveys, and leaves supply a mere 380,000b/d above its output target of 30 million b/d.

With oil just above Saudi Arabia’s preferred level of $100, Opec at a meeting on May 31 in Vienna agreed to maintain the 30 million b/d target, leaving the door open for informal Saudi supply tweaks depending on demand.

The most notable drop in Opec output has come from Libya. Protests at oilfields and terminals led to supply falling below one million b/d earlier in June, according to the state oil company, although production recovered later in the month. Supply in Nigeria, increasingly disrupted by oil spills, flooding and theft, remains under downward pressure. Output of Nigerian Usan crude, originally expected to amount to four cargoes in June, was offline for most of the month.

The Usan operator, Total, declared a force majeure on loadings which is still in place. Another Nigerian crude grade, Bonny Light, remains under force majeure.

Iraq’s exports have slipped to 2.35 million b/d so far in June due to poor weather disrupting loadings in the south and interruptions to pipeline flow in the north of the country, according to shipping data and industry sources.

Supply fell in Angola due to export scheduling. Shipments of grades including Saxi and Plutonio crude were lower than in May, when exports rose.

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