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Wednesday, March 30, 2022

OPEC and Russia to Meet as War in Ukraine Roils Oil Market

In the last month, oil markets have been shaken by a war that has sparked a jump in prices and threatened a critical shortfall in crude and other petroleum products.

But when most of the world’s largest oil producers meet by teleconference on Thursday to discuss supplies, analysts don’t expect much action. Officials from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and Russia are likely to do little more than announce their usual modest monthly production increases, leading to questions about how much oil the group really does have in the tank.

Western sanctions imposed on Russia over its invasion of Ukraine are likely to lead to the loss of substantial quantities of both crude and oil products, especially diesel fuel, from the market. Already, major buyers of Russian oil, like Shell and TotalEnergies, have said they will gradually purge petroleum of Russian origin from their vast networks.

“These losses will be enduring as Russia will likely remain the most sanctioned country on earth for the foreseeable future,” wrote Helima Croft, head of commodities at RBC Capital Markets, an investment bank, in a note to clients on Wednesday.

Russia is one of the world’s top three oil producers, along with the United States and Saudi Arabia, and exports about eight million barrels a day in crude and products. The International Energy Agency, the Paris-based group, estimates that as much as three million barrels a day of Russian oil, or about 3 percent of world supplies, could soon be shut down in what “could turn into the biggest supply crisis in decades.”

Only Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates could produce substantially more crude “that could help offset a Russian shortfall,” the agency said in its latest oil market report.

Yet these countries — the de facto leader of OPEC and a key ally — don’t seem inclined to act, a stance that seems puzzling given their longstanding security and commercial links to the West.

Mohammed Badra/EPA, via Shutterstock

“The wider question is: Do even they face some technical obstacles” to bringing large additional volumes of oil online? said Richard Bronze, head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, a research firm. Saudi Arabia says it has the ability to produce about 12.5 million barrels a day, more than two million barrels a day above recent output.

Certainly most members of a group of OPEC and its allies, known as OPEC Plus, have already run out of firepower, as countries like Nigeria and Angola have been unable to keep up with recent targets. The group is likely to add only a small fraction of the output increase it announces Thursday, Mr. Bronze figures. Russia clearly won’t be able to increase production, because it is already running out of storage tanks for unsold oil.

Moreover, the group is approaching the end, later this year, of unwinding the steep production cuts of early 2020 that helped bolster the market when demand and prices plummeted in the early days of the pandemic.

The Saudis and the Emiratis may figure that, with prices gyrating and the outcome of the conflict in Ukraine far from clear, now is not the time to unleash what resources they have left. While events like the coronavirus lockdowns in China are probably reducing demand, oil consumption is still likely to be higher in the summer driving season and output may potentially be lower.

The fact that closing prices for Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, have swung in recent weeks from as high as nearly $130 a barrel to below $100 allows the group to argue, however unconvincingly, that geopolitics rather than shortfalls are adding a premium to the price and go on taking in huge volumes of cash.

“Current volatility is not caused by changes in market fundamentals but by current geopolitical developments,” the group said after its last meeting on March 2.

In addition, the International Energy Agency is in the early stages of coordinating a 60-million-barrel release of oil, announced on March 1, from the reserves of the United States and about two dozen other countries. These additions to supply reduce the incentive for OPEC Plus to try to influence the markets, analysts say.

Also, OPEC Plus does not seem ready to act against the interests of Russia, a co-chair of the group, which presumably would oppose an additional increase in production that would help countries live without Russian crude.

Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters

The United Arab Emirates, in particular, seems sympathetic to Russia’s concerns in the conflict with Ukraine and threatened by the prospect of democratic revolution that the Ukrainian government represents.

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