Six Opec+ members have agreed to 700,000 b/d worth of voluntary crude production cuts in the first quarter of next year, while Saudi Arabia said it will extend its existing 1mn b/d cut over the same period.
The voluntary reductions are calculated from the respective countries' 2024 output targets, which were set in June. They are in addition to a previous round of voluntary cuts announced in April.
The latest reductions comprise a 223,000 b/d cut from Iraq, 163,000 b/d from the UAE, 135,000 b/d from Kuwait, 82,000 b/d from Kazakhstan, 51,000 b/d from Algeria and 42,000 b/d from Oman, according to the Opec Secretariat.
In addition, Russia said it would cut its oil exports by 500,000 b/d in the first quarter next year compared with May-June 2023 levels. This is deeper than its current 300,000 b/d cut although it includes 200,000 b/d of refined products.
Saudi Arabia, which has done much of the heavy lifting in terms of Opec+ production cuts in the past year, has agreed to a three-month extension of the 1mn b/d reduction that it announced in June and began implementing in July.
"In order to support market stability, these voluntary cuts will be returned gradually subject to market conditions," Opec said.
The decision to make deeper cuts comes on the back of falling oil prices in recent weeks. Front-month Ice Brent crude futures hit a 2023 high of $96.55/bl in late September before falling to as low as $77.42/bl in mid-November. Brent was hovering around the $83/bl mark as of 17:55 GMT, close to today's opening price.