MOSCOW (Reuters) – Consultations on a preliminary deal between leading oil producers to freeze output should be concluded by March 1 after a group led by Russia and Saudi Arabia reached a common position this week in Doha, Russia’s energy minister said.
In a television interview aired on Saturday, Alexander Novak also said that the agreement announced on Feb. 16 was weighty enough.
“Those countries which have openly supported this approach are producing around 75 percent out of global (oil) export volumes. My point is that, in practice, this is enough to agree,” Novak told the Vesti on Saturday programme.
Russia, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Venezuela said this week after talks in Doha that they were ready to freeze production at January levels if other producers do the same.
Iran welcomed the deal. But it stopped short of saying it would itself freeze production at January levels and its deputy oil minister said on Saturday it would increase production soon.
Novak said talks between Venezuela and Iran were still ongoing, and said consultations would also be held with non-OPEC countries, including Mexico and Norway.
“I believe that they (Mexico and Norway) would take a constructive stance,” he said.
If additional oil were not supplied to the market, then the global surplus of oil would fall by at least 1.3 million barrels per day, Novak added.
WITH OR WITHOUT IRAN?
Novak said Iran had taken a relatively constructive stance on the Doha deal but not yet said it was ready to sign up to the proposals.
Its Deputy Oil Minister Rokneddin Javadi was quoted as saying on Saturday that Tehran aimed to increase oil production by 700,000 barrels per day in the near future.
Alexey Texler, Russia’s first deputy energy minister, said earlier this week that even without Iran there would be an effect from the deal.
According to Texler, Russia is talking about freezing January production levels. January output was around 1.5 percent higher than the annual average for 2015.
Novak also said it was “discussed with colleagues” that an oil price of $ 50 per barrel would suit consumers and exporters in the long term. He did not elaborate.
The minister believes that if the Doha agreement enters into force then Russia’s market share would remain unchanged.
(Reporting by Alexander Winning and Maria Kiselyova; Writing by Polina Devitt and Denis Pinchuk; Editing by John Stonestreet)