OPEC-10 oil output up 70,000 bpd in May to 26.64 mmbpd: Survey

Saturday, June 9 2007 - 12:30 AM WIB

The 10 members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) bound by the group's output agreements produced an average 26.64 million barrels per day (mmbpd) in May, a Platts survey showed June 8. This is an increase of 70,000 bpd from April's 26.57 mmbpd and is above the group's production targets.
 
Total production from all 12 members, including Iraq which does not participate in OPEC output pacts and Angola which joined the group at the beginning of this year, rose by 100,000 bpd to 30.29 mmbpd from April's 30.19 mmbpd, the survey showed.
 
Increases from Algeria, Iran, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Angola totaling 190,000 bpd were partly offset by 90,000 bpd in decreases from Nigeria, where some shut-in production was restored as other outages occurred, and Iraq.
 
"The good news for consumers is that higher prices do appear to be spurring concurrent increases in production. But the bad news remains the continuing situation in Nigeria, where production is down again, largely due to continued rebel activity in the Niger Delta," said John Kingston, Platts global director of oil. "The loss of several hundred thousand barrels a day of production from that key country is going to provide support to prices for the foreseeable future."
 
The May average of 26.64 mmbpd for the OPEC-10 leaves them overproducing their 25.8 mmbpd target by some 840,000 bpd.
 
OPEC agreed late last year to remove a total 1.7 mmbpd from actual oil supply. At a meeting in Vienna in March, it decided to maintain the 25.8 mmbpd target output level for the OPEC-10 and not to meet again until September 11.
 
The West's energy watchdog, the International Energy Agency, has urged OPEC to boost supply so as to allow depleted consumer oil stocks to build. But OPEC officials have insisted that there is no shortage of crude and that oil prices have risen because of a host of other factors, including concerns about the adequacy of summer gasoline supplies in the , the ongoing situation in the Niger Delta which has resulted in large volumes of crude production being shut in, and geopolitics.
 
On Tuesday, OPEC Secretary General Abdalla el-Badri said OPEC would only raise official limits if it saw changes in fundamentals, including a "constant" draw in consumer oil inventories and oil prices at high levels for a sustained period. (*)
Country-by-country breakdown of production with figures in mmbpd:
 

Country

May

Apr

Mar

Feb

Jan

Cut


Algeria

1.350

1.330

1.330

1.330

1.340

0.084

Indonesia

0.840

0.840

0.850

0.840

0.860

0.055

Iran

3.850

3.800

3.800

3.800

3.850

0.249

Kuwait

2.420

2.410

2.410

2.410

2.460

0.142

Libya

1.680

1.680

1.680

1.680

1.690

0.102

Nigeria

2.130

2.200

2.150

2.250

2.250

0.142

Qatar

0.800

0.790

0.790

0.790

0.800

0.050

Saudi Arabia

8.610

8.600

8.600

8.600

8.750

0.538

UAE

2.540

2.500

2.500

2.490

2.500

0.143

Venezuela

2.420

2.420

2.430

2.430

2.450

0.195

OPEC-10

26.640

26.570

26.540

26.620

26.950

1.700

Angola*

1.630

1.580

1.570

1.550

1.500

N/A

Iraq

2.020

2.040

2.000

2.010

1.660

-

Total

30.290

30.190

30.110

30.180

30.110

-


*  Platts estimates

** Angola joined OPEC on January 1, 2007.

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