LONDON: Opec oil output has fallen to an eight-year low in September after attacks on Saudi oil plants cut production, deepening the impact of a supply pact and US sanctions on Iran and Venezuela, a Reuters survey found.

The 14-member Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) has pumped 28.9 million barrels per day (bpd) this month, the survey showed, down 750,000 bpd from August’s revised figure and the lowest monthly total since 2011.

The September 14 attacks on two Saudi oil plants shut down 5.7m bpd of production and sent crude prices up 20 per cent to $72 a barrel on September 16. The price has since fallen to $61, near levels before the Saudi attack, pressured by a rapid production restart and concern about slowing demand.

“Traders are clearly not particularly concerned about risk premiums in oil,” said Craig Erlam, analyst at online broker OANDA. “The focus again seems to be shifting back to the demand dynamics and the risk of further downgrades.” Opec, Russia and other oil producer allies, known as Opec+, agreed in December to reduce supply by 1.2m bpd from the start of this year. Opec’s share of the cut is 800,000 bpd, to be delivered by 11 members, with exemptions for Iran, Libya and Venezuela.

The 11 Opec members bound by the agreement, which now runs until March 2020, have easily exceeded the pledged cuts. Compliance has been at 218% in September, up from 131% in August, the survey found.

Two of the three exempt producers also pumped less oil than they did the previous month.

The biggest drop was in Saudi Arabia, which supplied 9.05m bpd, or 700,0000 bpd less than in August.

Released Inventories

The drop would have been even larger but for state oil company Aramco releasing stored crude from its inventories to limit the decline. Sources in the survey put Saudi production at between 8.5m bpd and 8.6m bpd.

Before this month’s attack, Saudi Arabia was already restraining output by more than called for by the Opec-led supply deal to support the market.

Output fell further in Venezuela, which is contending with US sanctions on state oil company PDVSA – aimed at ousting socialist President Nicolas Maduro - as well as a long-term decline in output owing to a lack of investment and maintenance.

PDVSA this month suspended some crude blending and cut production in response to a build in domestic inventories while the sanctions have proved a deterrent to customers and shippers.

Published in Dawn, October 1st, 2019

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