
Latest deal puts opec credibility on line
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OPEC has promised a sweeping global deal to slash oil production and rescue the collapsed market, but now it has to show it means business. “This is the last-chance saloon,” said Leo
Drollas, chief economist at the Center for Global Energy Studies in London. “If they don’t produce a credible agreement, I think they will be consigned to oblivion, forever. No one will
believe they can do anything, even in a crisis.” Many analysts predict the package will start unraveling even before it officially takes effect on Tuesday--even though some of the oil
ministers gathering in Vienna for emergency talks today will likely make actual cuts. “This addresses the problem,” said Peter Bogin, an associate director at Cambridge Energy Research
Associates in Paris. “It doesn’t solve the problem.” OPEC and some newly found friends among non-OPEC producers, including Mexico and Oman, wowed the oil markets last week by announcing
production cutbacks intended to pull crude prices off their recent nine-year lows. Norway has also indicated it might lower production. The cheap prices have been a bargain for oil consumers
but devastating for OPEC and other producers. The weak market has cost OPEC $15 billion in lost oil revenues this year, said Libyan oil minister Abdalla Salem el-Badri. But after news of
the promised reductions, oil jumped about $2 per barrel on New York and London futures markets. But analysts say the rally was fueled by a psychological shift among traders who quickly could
go the other way when actual reductions turn out to be less than promised. Nobody has yet removed a single barrel from the market, and once the cuts start, they may come up short. A deal
announced last week in Riyadh by Saudi Arabia (OPEC’s top producer), Venezuela (OPEC’s biggest quota buster) and Mexico was initially billed as removing 1.6 million to 2 million barrels a
day from the glutted global market. Analysts figure the real number might be just half that, and they say the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will find its reputation on the
line if it can’t deliver. Venezuelan oil minister Erwin Arrieta, arriving in Vienna on Sunday, said OPEC would ratify its plans to reduce production but that it was too soon to say whether
those who are cutting back should have to cut more. OPEC created its own dilemma by agreeing in November to raise stated oil output by 10%, just as the Asian economic crisis and the mild
winter in key heating-oil markets was stifling demand. For years, the once-powerful oil cartel has failed to function as such, with members openly violating their production quotas and oil
prices often widely missing the official target of $21 per barrel. This week, OPEC is unlikely to tinker with individual production quotas, which now give the group an official production
ceiling of 27.5 million barrels a day, experts say. OPEC is actually producing around 28.7 million barrels a day--and trying to dole out new numbers to all 11 members would likely turn into
a nightmare of infighting. Arrieta said last week that OPEC’s quota system “belongs to history.” Even if Venezuela cuts the 200,000 barrels of daily oil production it has promised, it would
be producing 600,000 barrels over its OPEC quota each day. If tiny Qatar cuts the 30,000 barrels of oil daily it has promised, it will still be producing 257,000 barrels above its quota of
413,000 barrels. Experts doubt whether Nigeria will deliver the 125,000 barrels of cuts it has promised, and whether Indonesia, suffering a massive financial crisis, can cut the 70,000
barrels it has promised. Drollas figures the producers need to cut 2.2 million barrels a day to prop up the market, and he predicts prices will begin to drift lower when traders see too much
oil is still being shipped in April. MORE TO READ