DHAKA: Oil ministers from three Opec countries, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Venezuela, as well as Russia, agreed to freeze oil output at January levels, as long as others follow suit.
The announcement came after the four ministers met in Doha on Tuesday, reports the BBC.
The move is designed to support the oil price, which has fallen sharply in recent months.
Hopes for such a move underpinned the oil price in recent days but oil fell back from earlier gains.
Saudi Arabian oil minister Ali al-Naimi said, ‘Freezing now at the January level is adequate for the market. We don’t want significant gyrations in prices, we want to meet demand. We want a stable oil price’.
Brent crude, which had been up more than 5% earlier, fell back to be just 1.9% higher at $34.02 a barrel, while US crude was up 1% at $30.03.
The closed-door meeting indicates the mood may be shifting among producers, especially Saudi Arabia, which has been determined to defend market share rather than prices.
However, City Index analyst Fawad Razaqzada said the move had disappointed the market slightly because many had hoped for a cut rather than a production freeze.
‘In the short term, oil prices may come under some pressure. Nevertheless, it is a step in the right direction and if other major producers follow suit then at the very least it should help to prevent oil prices from suffering further big falls,’ he said.
Olivier Jakob, a Petromatrix strategist, said, ‘It’s really the first supply management decision taken since November 2014, so even though there will be some that will try to discount it and say it’s not a cut, it’s a change. It is a big change in policy’.
Opec’s plan to drive out higher-cost producers has been largely ineffective.
BDST: 1802 HRS, FEB 16, 2016
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