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Opec+ crude production edges lower

  • Spanish Market: Crude oil
  • 09/12/22

Opec+ crude production fell in November as cuts by Saudi Arabia and Opec's other Mideast Gulf members more than offset a rise in Russian and Kazakh supply.

Production by the 19 Opec+ members subject to quotas fell by 310,000 b/d to 38.29mn b/d (see table), according to Argus' survey, leaving the group 1.81mn b/d short of its new substantially lower November target last month. Opec+ agreed to cut its collective quota by 2mn b/d for November onwards on the back of concerns about Chinese oil demand and worries of a global recession. But the group has been failing to deliver on pledged supply for over two years now, owing to years of underinvestment, disruption and sanctions.

Non-Opec members of the group raised their combined output by 460,000 b/d to an eight-month high. Kazakhstan's production rose by 330,000 b/d with the return of the Tengiz field, leading to a 500,000 b/d increase in loadings of its main export grade CPC Blend. Crude output levels were around 1.8mn b/d in early December, data from state-owned monitoring service IACOG show, but are likely to drop as tankers remain bottled up in the Black Sea by a dispute over insurance and transit through the Turkish straits. Over 20 vessels, almost all of which carry CPC Blend, are waiting to pass into the Mediterranean.

Russian production was higher last month, largely reflecting the restart of Sakhalin 1. Rosneft assumed temporary operatorship of the project from ExxonMobil in October, and exports of Sokol crude from the De Kastri terminal trebled to nearly 150,000 b/d last month, data from Vortexa show. Exports of other crude streams fell as the EU's embargo on Russian crude and the start of the G7 price cap scheme approached. Urals exports were down by 70,000 b/d and ESPO Blend shipments fell by 40,000 b/d. Crude deliveries did rise to Russian refineries, though. Russian deputy prime minister Alexander Novak has acknowledged that his government's planned ban on trade within the price cap mechanism could result in production losses.

Output among the 10 Opec members with targets was down by 770,000 b/d in November, reaching a six-month low. The group's Mideast Gulf members reduced their combined output by 820,000 b/d, while west African producers added 70,000 b/d. Delivered output by west African producers, particularly Nigeria and Angola, was still well below what was pledged, and they were responsible for close to a 1mn b/d shortfall relative to targets last month despite the recovery.

Nigerian output rose after several production and export facilities came back online. This enabled shipments of Forcados crude to resume after a three-month break. Nigeria's crude production hit 1.59mn b/d in early December, state-owned NNPC said on 8 December, which would be the highest since mid-2020. The increase is because of an improved security situation in the onshore and offshore sectors, NNPC's chief upstream investment officer Bala Wunti says.

Saudi Arabia's 440,000 b/d output reduction meant that it accounted for nearly three-fifths of all the cuts made by the Opec 10 last month. The monthly fall in Iraqi production was below the level required, leaving it above quota.

For want of condensate

Limited flows of much-needed condensate from Iran were behind a month-on-month decline in Venezuelan crude production. Most Venezuelan crude is heavy or extra heavy and requires blending with condensate to make it easier to move by pipeline. State-owned PdV has relied heavily on Iran for sporadic condensate cargoes in the past year, which several traders said ran out in November.

Libyan production fell by 80,000 b/d to 1.09mn b/d last month. But Libya's NOC reported Libyan crude output of 1.21mn b/d on 6 December.

Non-Opec crude productionmn b/d
NovOct*Nov targetDifference to target
Russia9.819.6210.48-0.67
Oman0.840.880.84-0.00
Azerbaijan0.550.550.68-0.13
Kazakhstan1.761.441.630.14
Malaysia0.400.390.57-0.17
Bahrain0.210.200.200.01
Brunei0.070.050.10-0.03
Sudan0.060.070.07-0.01
South Sudan0.080.110.12-0.05
Total non-Opec13.7713.3114.69-0.92
*revised
Opec wellhead productionmn b/d
NovOctNov targetDifference to target
Saudi Arabia10.4610.9010.48-0.02
Iraq4.484.604.430.05
Kuwait2.702.802.680.02
UAE3.023.183.020.00
Algeria1.031.051.010.02
Nigeria1.211.141.74-0.53
Angola1.101.081.46-0.35
Congo (Brazzaville)0.240.250.31-0.07
Gabon0.210.210.180.03
Equatorial Guinea0.070.080.12-0.05
Opec 1024.5225.2925.42-0.90
Iran2.582.58nana
Libya1.091.17nana
Venezuela0.680.70nana
Total Opec 13*28.8729.74nana
*Iran, Libya and Venezuela are exempt from production targets
Opec+ productionmn b/d
NovOct*Nov targetDifference to target
Opec 1024.5225.2925.42-0.90
Non-Opec 913.7713.3114.69-0.92
Total38.2938.6040.10-1.81
*revised

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29/07/24

Tension builds after Venezuela vote

Tension builds after Venezuela vote

Caracas, 29 July (Argus) — Violence after polls closed in Venezuela's election late Sunday evening pointed to more uncertainty as President Nicolas Maduro seeks a third term in a race marred by harassment of the opposition and amid reimposition of US oil sanctions. One man was shot and killed at a voting center and the main coalition of parties running against Maduro denounced severe irregularities during tallies after the vote. The electoral authority (CNE) ordered some polling stations to stop transmitting vote counts to CNE headquarters in Caracas, opposition leader Delsa Solorzano said. Solorzano also said opposition witnesses had been kicked out of polling stations and denied required copies of vote tallies. "The transmission of results, of the tallies, has been paralyzed", Solorzano, the top opposition representative before CNE, said on social media. Maduro has not spoken publicly since midday in Venezuela and he has not claimed victory. Opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez, running in the place of blocked candidate Maria Corina Machado, said that he would defend the results. Exit polls indicated that 65.8pc of voters supported Gonzalez, with 13.5pc voting for Maduro, out of 52pc of eligible voters participating, pollster Meganalisis said. "The results are impossible to hide, the country has chosen peaceful change," Gonzalez said. The election began auspiciously, with long lines since Saturday night, uneventful voting and heavy turnouts. But nighttime brought some violence once rumors of Maduro losing the election began circulating. In addition to the one person shot at a voting center, pro-Maduro motorcycle gangs threatened polling stations and opposition members and witnesses, and some ballots have been burned, opposition representatives said. The US administration has said it would be prepared to provide guarantees for Venezuela's government leaders if Maduro loses the election and lets the winner take power. The opposition also said this week that it would move to open the energy sector to outside investment if it takes power, and the sector faces massive repairs after decades of underinvestment in its infrastructure. Maduro in the last days of the campaign touted energy plans such as signing an agreement to explore for and produce natural gas in the offshore Cocuina-Manakin fields that straddles Venezuela's maritime border with Trinidad and Tobago. Gasoline and electricity shortages continued to plague the country with some of the world's largest oil reserves throughout the campaign. By Carlos Camacho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Eni confident on 2024 output, but Libya project slips


26/07/24
26/07/24

Eni confident on 2024 output, but Libya project slips

London, 26 July (Argus) — Executives at Italy's Eni are confident it will achieve the upper end of its 1.69mn-1.71mn production guidance for this year, but start-up of a key Libyan project is set to slip from 2026 into 2027. In a presentation of second-quarter earnings today, A&E Structure was one of two Libyan projects on a list of Eni's upcoming start-ups through to 2028 that will deliver some 740,000 b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) of net production to the company. A&E Structure is a 160,000 boe/d gas development that will include some 40,000 b/d of liquids production, mainly condensate. A&E Structure is central to Libya's ability to sustain gas exports to Italy, which have dropped in recent years on a combination of rising domestic consumption and falling production. Supplies through the 775mn ft³/d Greenstream pipeline hit their lowest since the 2011 revolution in 2023, averaging 250mn ft³/d. The slide has continued since, with year-to-date volumes of around 160mn ft³/d on track for a record low. Eni's other upcoming Libyan project — the Bouri Gas Utilisation Project development that aims to capture 85mn ft³/d of gas at the 25,000 b/d offshore Bouri oil field — had already been pushed back from 2025 to 2026. For 2024 Eni expects to be "at the upper boundary of its guidance", according to chief operating officer of Natural Resources Guido Brusco. The company had a strong first half, during which output was 1.73mn boe/d — 5pc up on the year — thanks to good performance at assets in Ivory Coast, Indonesia, Congo (Brazzaville) and Libya. Brusco said Eni is in the process of starting up its 30,000 boe/d Cassiopea gas project in Italy, with first production expected next month, and the 45,000 b/d second phase of the Baleine oil project in Ivory Coast is expected to start by the end of this year. At Baleine, Brusco confirmed the two vessels to be used at phase two "will be in country in September and, building on the experience of phase one, we expect a couple of months of final integrated commissioning" before first oil. Eni also said today it would raise its dividend for 2024 by 6pc over 2023 to €1/share, and confirmed share repurchases this year of €1.6bn. It said there is potential for an additional buyback of up to €500mn, which is being evaluated this quarter. Eni's debt gearing is scheduled to fall below 20pc by the end of the year. Chief financial officer Francesco Gattei said these accelerated share buybacks would be possible if divestment deals are confirmed. By Jon Mainwaring and Aydin Calik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Yemen warring factions reach UN-mediated financial deal


25/07/24
25/07/24

Yemen warring factions reach UN-mediated financial deal

Dubai, 25 July (Argus) — The UAE today welcomed a UN-mediated agreement between Yemen's warring factions that could allay economic woes in the impoverished country. The UAE's ministry of foreign affairs hailed the 23 July announcement of an agreement between the internationally recognised Yemen presidential leadership council (PLC) and the Houthi militant group "with respect to airlines and the banking sector." The UAE, alongside Saudi Arabia, support the PLC. The agreement stipulates "cancelling all the recent decisions and procedures against banks by both sides and refraining in the future from any similar decisions or procedures," and calls for the resumption of Yemenia Airways' flights between Sana'a and Jordan at three a day and operating flights to Cairo and India "daily or as needed." The deal was reached two days after Israeli jets bombed the Houthi-controlled Red Sea port of Hodeidah. The internationally-recognised central bank in Aden in April ordered financial institutions to move their main operations from Houthi-held territory within 60 days or face sanctions. That deadline ran out in June, leading to a ban on dealing with six banks whose headquarters remained in Houthi-held Sana'a. The Houthis retaliated by taking similar measures against banks in PLC-held areas and seized four Yemenia Airways planes at Sana'a airport. The PLC said it hoped the Houthis would also meet a commitment to resume crude exports. Yemen's crude production collapsed soon after the start of the country's civil war, from around 170,000 b/d in 2011-13 to 50,000-60,000 b/d in 2022, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy. Data from analytics firm Kpler suggests Yemen has not exported any crude since October 2022. Threats yield results The Iran-backed Houthis earlier in July threatened to attack vital infrastructure such as airports and ports in Saudi Arabia, holding Riyadh responsible for decisions taken by Aden's central bank. The Houthis struck central Tel Aviv on 19 July, inviting an Israeli retaliation that took out a power station that supplies the Red Sea coastal city of Hodeidah and its port and fuel tanks, which are controlled by the Houthis. A breakthrough in the UN-mediated talks between the PLC and the Houthis resulted in the agreement on 22 July, a possible sign that Riyadh might have compromised to avoid a Houthi escalation. The Houthis have been attacking commercial ships in and around the Red Sea since November last year, six weeks after the breakout of the Israel-Hamas war, in what they say is an act of solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. By Bachar Halabi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Refining, LNG segments take Total’s profit lower in 2Q


25/07/24
25/07/24

Refining, LNG segments take Total’s profit lower in 2Q

London, 25 July (Argus) — TotalEnergies said today that a worsening performance at its downstream Refining & Chemicals business and its Integrated LNG segment led to a 7pc year-on-year decline in profit in the second quarter. Profit of $3.79bn was down from $5.72bn for the January-March quarter and from $4.09bn in the second quarter of 2023. When adjusted for inventory effects and special items, profit was $4.67bn — slightly lower than analysts had been expecting and 6pc down on the immediately preceding quarter. The biggest hit to profits was at the Refining & Chemicals segment, which reported an adjusted operating profit of $639mn for the April-June period, a 36pc fall on the year. Earlier in July, TotalEnergies had flagged lower refining margins in Europe and the Middle East, with its European Refining Margin Marker down by 37pc to $44.9/t compared with the first quarter. This margin decline was partially compensated for by an increase in its refineries' utilisation rate: to 84pc in April-June from 79pc in the first quarter. The company's Integrated LNG business saw a 13pc year on year decline in its adjusted operating profit, to $1.15bn. TotalEnergies cited lower LNG prices and sales, and said its gas trading operation "did not fully benefit in markets characterised by lower volatility than during the first half of 2023." A bright spot was the Exploration & Production business, where adjusted operating profit rose by 14pc on the year to $2.67bn. This was mainly driven by higher oil prices, which were partially offset by lower gas realisations and production. The company's second-quarter production averaged 2.44mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d), down by 1pc from 2.46mn boe/d reported for the January-March period and from the 2.47mn boe/d average in the second quarter of 2023. TotalEnergies attributed the quarter-on-quarter decline to a greater level of planned maintenance, particularly in the North Sea. But it said its underlying production — excluding the Canadian oil sands assets it sold last year — was up by 3pc on the year. This was largely thanks to the start up and ramp up of projects including Mero 2 offshore Brazil, Block 10 in Oman, Tommeliten Alpha and Eldfisk North in Norway, Akpo West in Nigeria and Absheron in Azerbaijan. TotalEnergies said production also benefited from its entry into the producing fields Ratawi, in Iraq, and Dorado in the US. The company expects production in a 2.4mn-2.45mn boe/d range in the third quarter, when its Anchor project in the US Gulf of Mexico is expected to start up. The company increased profit at its Integrated Power segment, which contains its renewables and gas-fired power operations. Adjusted operating profit rose by 12pc year-on-year to $502mn and net power production rose by 10pc to 9.1TWh. TotalEnergies' cash flow from operations, excluding working capital, was $7.78bn in April-June — an 8pc fall from a year earlier. The company has maintained its second interim dividend for 2024 at €0.79/share and plans to buy back up to $2bn of its shares in the third quarter, in line with its repurchases in previous quarters. By Jon Mainwaring Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Indian budget lifts spending for refining, crude SPR


24/07/24
24/07/24

Indian budget lifts spending for refining, crude SPR

Mumbai, 24 July (Argus) — India allocated 1.19 trillion rupees ($14.2bn) to the oil ministry in its budget for the 2024-25 fiscal year ending 31 March, up from Rs1.12 trillion in the 2023-24 revised budget. The budget presented by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on 23 July was the first since the BJP-led administration was re-elected in June . Indian state-controlled refiner IOC was allocated Rs273bn for 2024-25, up from Rs270bn in the revised budget for 2023-24. Bharat Petroleum (BPCL) received an increased allocation of Rs110bn, up from 95bn, while Hindustan Petroleum (HPCL) was allotted Rs107bn that was up from Rs102bn previously. No capital support was allocated to the oil marketing companies in the budget given IOC, BPCL and HPCL all reported record profits in 2023-24. India's crude import dependency rose to 88.3pc in April-June from 88.8pc the previous year, oil ministry data show. India's crude imports during January-June were up by around 1pc on a year earlier at 4.65mn b/d, according to Vortexa data. ONGC's allocation rose to Rs308bn for 2024-25, while fellow state-controlled upstream firm Oil India's increased to Rs68bn from Rs305bn and Rs56bn rupees respectively in the revised budget for 2023-24. India has been trying to reduce its dependence on imports and will offer 25 oil and gas blocks in the tenth bidding round in August or September under the Hydrocarbon Exploration and Licensing Policy's Open Acreage Licensing Programme (OALP). It offered 136,596.45km² in 28 upstream oil and gas blocks in the ninth bidding round. ONGC in January secured seven of the 10 areas of exploration blocks offered under India's eighth OALP round. A private-sector consortium of Reliance Industries and BP, Oil India and private-sector Sun Petrochemicals received one block each. Allocation for the Indian Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) received a push to Rs4.08bn for the construction of caverns under its second phase against Rs400mn in the previous budget. The first phase of India's SPR built 1.33mn t (9.75mn bl) of crude storage at Vishakhapatnam, 1.5mn t at Mangalore and 2.5mn t at Padur. A provision of Rs119.25bn was made for LPG subsidies in 2024-25 compared with spending of Rs122.4bn in 2023-24. By Roshni Devi Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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