OPEC’s roll of the dice
The
agreement reached at the extraordinary meeting of the Organisation
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, in Algiers, to trim the cartel’s
collective output by about 700,000 barrels a day, in an effort to balance
supply and demand in the global oil market, caught markets by surprise. It was
well-acknowledged that the group needed to take decisive action to staunch the
two-year-long slide in global crude prices, that saw Brent prices more than
halve from about $103 a barrel in end-August 2014 to $45.45 a barrel on
September 1 this year. Still, it was unclear if there could be a meaningful
consensus on production cuts among disparate member-countries — which included
the small-yet-prosperous West African country of Gabon, crisis-hit Venezuela,
and fractious West Asian nations such as Iran and Saudi Arabia. That the
56-year-old grouping arrived at an agreement, albeit after leaving a decision
on country-specific production targets to November, reflects just how desperate
the situation had become for most oil-producing economies. The output cut,
announced for the first time in eight years, is a tacit admission by the
group’s largest producer Saudi Arabia that its ‘pump-at-will’ approach has hurt
its economy as much, if not more, than the pain it may have caused North
American oil producers, including U.S. shale interests, that the policy largely
sought to target.
While
the big U.S. shale producers have resiliently
hung on and even begun investing in new acreage
this year, Saudi Arabia found itself with a huge hole in its budget. A fiscal
deficit of 16 per cent of GDP in 2015 that is projected to slightly narrow to
about 13 per cent this year forced spending cuts, including on wages and fuel
subsidies. This year the kingdom was driven to make its first overseas
borrowing in more than a decade, a five-year $10 billion loan. With the
economy’s growth set to slow to about 1 per cent in 2016, it had few options
but to return to the main fuel of its economic engine, crude oil. Given the
country’s involvement in conflicts across the region, both openly as in Yemen
and tacitly as in Syria, its rulers have possibly realised
the need to squeeze more revenue out of every barrel of oil. OPEC reportedly
made a concession to Iran in order to win its involvement in the deal by
exempting it from immediate production caps. With demand growth for petroleum
slowing far more rapidly than previously predicted, the success of the
production curbs in reviving oil prices will significantly hinge on cartel
discipline — something that has often been lacking in the past.
Cartel meaning is combine ,group,
conglomerate, organization
Staunch meaning is loyal, stalwart,
trustworthy
Consensus
meaning is accord, general agreement, harmony.
Disparate meaning is different,
dissimilar, distinctAlbeit meaning is although , even if, even though.
Desperate meaning is hopeless, reckless, outrageous
Resilient
meaning is flexible, strong, volatile, tough.
Acreage
meaning is property, land, holding.
Tacitly
meaning is silent, softly, inaudibly.
Exempting
meaning is free from responsibility, absolved, acquit.
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