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Saudis and Russia agree oil output freeze, Iran still an obstacle

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Russia : Assad and Iran are always my love... :pop:



Quote :

Saudis and Russia agree oil output freeze, Iran still an obstacle

DOHA | BY RANIA EL GAMAL AND TOM FINN
Tue Feb 16, 2016 7:09pm GMT


Top oil exporters Russia and Saudi Arabia agreed on Tuesday to freeze output levels but said the deal was contingent on other producers joining in - a major sticking point with Iran absent from the talks and determined to raise production.

The Saudi, Russian, Qatari and Venezuelan oil ministers announced the proposal after a previously undisclosed meeting in Doha. It could become the first joint OPEC and non-OPEC deal in 15 years, aimed at tackling a growing oversupply of crude and helping prices recover from their lowest in over a decade.

Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said freezing production at January levels - near record highs - was an adequate measure and he hoped other producers would adopt the plan. Venezuelan Oil Minister Eulogio Del Pino said more talks would take place with Iran and Iraq on Wednesday in Tehran.

"The reason we agreed to a potential freeze of production is simple: it is the beginning of a process which we will assess in the next few months and decide if we need other steps to stabilise and improve the market," Naimi told reporters.

"We don't want significant gyrations in prices, we don't want reduction in supply, we want to meet demand, we want a stable oil price. We have to take a step at a time," he said.

Oil prices LCOc1 jumped to $35.55 per barrel after the news about the secret meeting but later pared gains to trade near $33 on concerns that Iran may reject the deal and that even if Tehran agreed it would not help ease the growing global glut. [O/R]

OPEC member Iran, Saudi Arabia's regional arch rival, has pledged to steeply increase output in the coming months as it looks to regain market share lost after years of international sanctions, which were lifted in January following a deal with world powers over its nuclear programme.


"Our situation is totally different to those countries that have been producing at high levels for the past few years," a senior source familiar with Iran's thinking told Reuters.

Iranian Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh also indicated Tehran would not agree to freezing its output at January levels, saying the country would not give up its appropriate share of the global oil market.


SPECIAL TERMS

The fact that output from OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia and non-OPEC Russia - the world's two top producers and exporters - is near record highs complicates any agreement since Iran is producing at least 1 million barrels per day below its capacity and pre-sanctions levels.

However, two non-Iranian sources close to OPEC discussions told Reuters that Iran may be offered special terms as part of the output freeze deal. "Iran is returning to the market and needs to be given a special chance but it also needs to make some calculations," said one source.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich said freezing output was not a problem for his country as he anyway expected its production to be flat this year versus 2015.

An Iraqi oil ministry source said Baghdad was also happy to freeze production if all parties agreed.

"The agreement (if successful) should support oil prices but there are reasons to be cautious. Not all OPEC members have signed up to the deal - notably Iran and Iraq. History would also suggest that compliance may be an issue," said Capital Economics' analyst Jason Tuvey.

OPEC has been quarrelling for decades over output levels and Russia, which last agreed to cooperate with OPEC back in 2001, never followed through on its pledge and raised exports instead.

Also complicating any potential agreement is the geo-political rivalry in the Middle East between Sunni Muslim power Saudi Arabia and Shi'ite Iran. Saudi Arabia and its Gulf allies are fighting proxy conflicts with Russia and Iran in the region, including in Syria and Yemen.

In Syria's five-year-old civil war, Riyadh politically and financially backs some rebel groups battling President Bashar al-Assad's government, which has gained the upper hand with the help of Russian warplanes and Iranian-backed Shi'ite militias.


RUSSIAN BUDGET

The Doha meeting came after more than 18 months of declining oil prices, knocking crude below $30 a barrel for the first time in over a decade from as high as $115 a barrel in mid-2014.

The slump was triggered by booming U.S. shale oil output and a decision by Saudi Arabia and its OPEC Gulf allies to raise production to fight for market share and drive higher-cost production out of the market.

But although U.S. output has begun to decline and global demand has been robust it has still not been enough to offset booming global production which has led to oil stockpiles rising to record levels.

Saudi Arabia has long insisted it would reduce supply only if other OPEC and non-OPEC members agreed, but Russia - the world's biggest oil producer and No.2 exporter - has said it would not join in as its Siberian fields were different from those of OPEC.

The mood began to change in January as oil prices fell below $30 per barrel.

While Venezuela has been the hardest-hit producer, current oil prices are a fraction of what Russia needs to balance its budget as it heads towards parliamentary elections this year. Saudi finances are also suffering badly, running a $98 billion budget deficit last year, which it seeks to trim this year.

But while talking about potential cooperation with OPEC, Russia raised its output to a new record high in January. For a table on OPEC and Russian output, click here

"Even if they do freeze production at January levels, you have still got global inventory builds which are going to weigh on prices. So whilst it's a positive step, I don't think it will have a huge impact on supply/demand balances, simply because we were oversupplied in January anyway," said Energy Aspects' analyst Dominic Haywood.

(Additional reporting by Alex Lawler, Reem Shamseddine, Ahmad Ghaddar and Amanda Cooper; Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Dale Hudson and Pravin Char)

Reuters


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not an obstacle , an american ally infact , history repeats itself , arabs embargoed america before and iran did the same exact thing
 
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not an obstacle , an american ally infact , history repeats itself , arabs embargoed america before and iran did the same exact thing


But of course ! :partay:


Quote 2 :

Iran Delusional About Oil Potential

By Mansour Kashfi
Posted on Mon, 21 December 2015 22:51


After 37 miserable years of the so-called Islamic Republic (IR) and more than $1.6 trillion of oil income, Iran’s oil and gas infrastructure has become ineffective and is suffering from poor management and chronic corruption. As a result, the well-respected healthy national oil company, with a 6.3 million b/d crude production prior to the revolution, plunged to a near bankrupt industry with at best a little above 3 million b/d production.


Massive Deterioration Of The Iranian Oil Industry


Iranian output has reached a plateau for some time now, and production has been on the wane by over 200,000 b/d/year for the past decade. Pressure dropping in reservoirs and continuous year-to-year decline in production appear to have been triggered by long periods of technical constraints on operations and by natural aging of the Iranian fields. The lack of regular maintenance and application of new technology, and particularly extensive neglect of the fields in the last several years under sanctions, have resulted in further damage to the Iranian reservoirs.

Geologically, high degradation of reservoirs can take place while wells have been shut-in or declining in production. This condition is exacerbated if gas injection has not been performed on reservoirs for a while.

According to U.S. EIA, the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) needs to inject at least 260 million cubic meters of gas daily to its matured oil fields. But in recent years, NIOC has never had the capability to inject more than half of this volume per day, and recently, since the production of gas is hardly even equal to domestic consumption, no gas remains to be injected. Therefore, EIA concludes that old Iranian oil fields are naturally losing pressure, which causes 8 to 13 percent oil production to deplete each year. Currently, the majority of power plants in the country use liquid fuel due to scarcity of gas, which leads to terrible air pollution. According to the International Health Organization, damages resulting from air pollution in Iran cost $16 billion annually.

Iran has built refineries in various non-democratic countries with which it has good rapport. Billions of dollars of Iran’s oil money that should have been invested in its own dilapidated oil and gas industry, along with millions of barrels of free crude, have gone to Syria, Sudan, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Gambia, Gabon, Bolivia, Ecuador, Cuba, Uganda, Sri Lanka and even oil-rich Venezuela to keep their refineries running. In contrast, not even one refinery was built in Iran since 1979, with the exception of the inauguration of the Arak refinery and Bandar Abbas complex, which were near completion in the monarchical government.

The deputy oil minister and head of the National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company Abbas Kazemi recently said, “After the lifting of sanctions our policy will be purchasing foreign oil refineries and their shares abroad.”

Oil minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh and his deputies take any occasion that arises to deliver untrue information and empty promises: oil discoveries, gas production, petrochemical potential, construction of new refineries – they portray such a rosy future for the country and the Iranian petroleum industry after sanctions are lifted. These statements are overly optimistic illusions, and they are impossible under the ambitious timeframes laid out.


Iran Petroleum contract

As the world leaders and the Islamic Republic reached an agreement over Iran’s nuclear program on July 14, major oil companies’ attention was immediately directed toward the vast amounts of Iranian oil and gas. Further, Iranian oil officials have tried to take advantage of the situation to lure investors to Iran and came up with the proposal of an entirely new set of oil and gas agreements. Iranian oil minister Bijn Namdar Zanganeh time and again has requested huge investments—hundreds of billions of dollars—within the next five years in order to rejuvenate the impaired Iranian oil industry.

Rehabilitating Iran’s aged and damaged fields will be an enormous job and will require a lot money. Yet, all this can be materialized if the NIOC regains lost customers for its crude. Experts believe that Iran will have a difficult time in regaining the market share that it lost over three years ago.

To convince international oil companies to invest in Iran at the same time that oil markets are flooded with product and low demand will be extremely difficult. Nevertheless, in order to lure these kinds of investments to Iran, the Islamic Republic’s officials often have said that foreign companies can easily participate in the already-planned privatization of state owned companies in the country.

Iran postponed several times a planned oil and gas informative meeting in London, where the oil ministry’s officials are to introduce the “Iran Petroleum Contract” (IPC) to international oil companies. It has been expected that Iran’s officials will deliver in detail the terms and conditions of the proposed new 25 year contract to the audience, provided that the IAEA verifies that the terms and conditions of the nuclear agreement negotiated on July 14 are honored by Iran.

Evidently, IPC will replace the previous “buy back” contract. This new model for oil projects aims to entice international producers. The new oil contract terms apparently give oil producers some share of a given field’s production under the agreement. The Chairman of Iran’s oil contracts restructuring committee, Mehdi Hossein, in mid-August announced that Iran has selected 50 oil and gas projects to offer to major oil companies at a conference in London initially on December 14-16.

He stated that the new oil contract models include exploratory blocks that Iran will offer to oil producers, and they will have three months to consider to bid on the projects. Hosseini said “production sharing” replaces the “buy back” contracts and “in the short run our goal is to produce 5 million b/d and increase that immediately to 5.7 million”. However, the December date for IPC presentation was postponed to Feb. 22-24 2016. Zanganeh believes IPC should be introduced after sanctions are ended.

Apparently, the new terms in the IPC are more generous than the “buy back” deals. Unlike the “buy back” contract that merely paid an agreed upon fee when the contract was completed, the new model apparently could provide oil producers some share of any field’s production under the agreement. Therefore, companies have the right to book more reserves on their balance sheet. Furthermore, the length of the contract could be up to 25 years. It seems it is easier for investors to tap into Iran’s lucrative oil and gas riches.

Iran’s officials have time and again stated that the country imposes no limitations for foreign oil companies to invest in its energy industry. In fact, the need to prepare these new models of contract is a true testament to Iran’s bankrupt and ineffective oil industry.

Investors that are planning to make deals with the Islamic Republic should be aware that they still face a lot of uncertainty and risk with the possibility of the return of sanctions looming for years to come.

Oil companies planning to do business in Iran should be wary of the problem of chronic corruption in the governing system of the country. There are bureaucratic attitudes that dominate the business environment in Iran. So long as this ill-managed regime is in control, investments in the Iranian oil industry, along with opportunities they might provide, could also be a great risk to prospective contractors.

Further, the present governing system in Iran certainly raises questions over the security of investments by major oil companies in Iran.

Therefore, the question is, can NIOC deliver as its officials claim? The fact is, the capabilities of Iran’s petroleum industry fall short of said rhetoric.


By Mansour Kashfi

Mansour Kashfi, PhD, is president of Kashex International Petroleum Consulting and is a college professor in Dallas,Texas. He is also author of more than 100 articles and books about petroleum geology worldwide.



Oilprice.com


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I wish my government would just sanction Saudi Arabia for about thirty years or more, just until there brain fully develops. Topics of Saudi Arabia,.... oil, oil, beheading, oil, terrorists, destroying/creating a mosque, drifting cars, Mecca, trampling.... Repeat. :coffee:
 
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As if it was Iran that has produced more than what OPEC agreed upon for years ,and made such a plunge in prices ....
 
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I hope Kay Ess Aye enjoys the bed they have made. Sleep in it.
 
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Why it is Iran fault? Iran has attained her production capacity years ago and no new discoveries had been known made to this day. Blaming a country who can't produce more than it is doing now and under embargo for years we can't count, for the price oil debacle? There is one lousy culprit, that is Saudi Arabia that thought by flooding the market , she would bring fire under the Russian datcha, all they have accomplished is to light fire under her tent. Russians, Iranians, and other that are dealing with harsh economic reality due to genious Saudi plan, are a lot more resilient than the Sauds...
 
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I wish my government would just sanction Saudi Arabia for about thirty years or more, just until there brain fully develops. Topics of Saudi Arabia,.... oil, oil, beheading, oil, terrorists, destroying/creating a mosque, drifting cars, Mecca, trampling.... Repeat. :coffee:

HHHHHH :D
You're must be delusional. Your country can be manipulated as many countries want not as your citizens want.
Only you can places sanctions on isolated countries such as Iran and NK. keep dreaming ...
 
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HHHHHH :D
You're must be delusional. Your country can be manipulated as many countries want not as your citizens want.
Only you can places sanctions on isolated countries such as Iran and NK. keep dreaming ...
Dude, your country is nothing but an ugly desert filled with milions of bared *** uneducated people with self destruction capability,camels,lizards and oil.what is so special about your useless desert?
 
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HHHHHH :D
You're must be delusional. Your country can be manipulated as many countries want not as your citizens want.
Only you can places sanctions on isolated countries such as Iran and NK. keep dreaming ...
39.jpg


Beram too ofogh mahv sham!
 
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Is it
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Iran is exempted. They'll only cooperate on production levels once their pre-santions production levels and export levels have been achieved "

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I wish my government would just sanction Saudi Arabia for about thirty years or more, just until there brain fully develops. Topics of Saudi Arabia,.... oil, oil, beheading, oil, terrorists, destroying/creating a mosque, drifting cars, Mecca, trampling.... Repeat. :coffee:
Dont waste your time on Saudi Arabia, they are doing good in containing criminals and would be criminals ,so far the most stable in the region..A strong Saudi Arabia is good for everyone of us.
 
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@BLACKEAGLE I thought Saudi Arabia wanted to 'bring Iran to its knees' by producing high amounts of oil deliberately to keep prices down, now that they felt the heat, they are begging Iran to agree with an output freeze and it's Iran who resists the idea? :lol:
 
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