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White House rebukes Opec for ‘siding with Russia’ after big output cut

Opec+  has agreed to make a large production cut to keep oil prices high, drawing an immediate rebuke from the US. 

The move was defended by ministers from the producers group as necessary to protect the oil industry and their own economies from the risk of a global slowdown. The White House slammed the decision and indicated that it would respond to the supply reduction.

Opec and its allies agreed on Wednesday to reduce their collective output by 2-million barrels a day from November. The outdated production baselines used to measure the curbs means that actual oil supply will only fall by about half that amount, but it’s still the biggest cut since 2020 that risks adding another shock to the world’s economy. 

Brent crude, the international benchmark, jumped as much as 2.4% to a two-week high of $93.96 a barrel. 

“The president is disappointed by the shortsighted decision by Opec+ to cut production quotas while the global economy is dealing with the continued negative impact of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine,” the White House said in a statement after the meeting. 

Earlier on Wednesday, US officials were making calls to counterparts in Gulf Arab states trying to discourage the production cuts, according to people familiar with the situation. President Biden has long been campaigning for Opec+ to boost output, visiting Saudi Arabia earlier this year in search of lower pump prices for Americans ahead of midterm elections in November.

The White House’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, and National Economic Council director Brian Deese, said in the statement that the US would release another 10-million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in November, and that “the president will continue to direct SPR releases as appropriate to protect American consumers and promote energy security”.

In addition to the cuts that will take effect from November, Opec+ extended its co-operation agreement until the end of 2023. The supply curbs will remain in place until the end of next year, unless the market changes, said Saudi energy minister Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman. 

After the meeting, Nigerian minister of state for petroleum resources Timipre Sylva was frank about the group’s motivation for cutting output. 

“Opec wants prices around $90,” Sylva said in an interview with Bloomberg. “It would destabilise some economies” if crude fell below that level, he said. 

Other ministers, including United Arab Emirates energy minister Suhail Al Mazrouei, said they were motivated by a desire to increase investment in the oil industry in order to guarantee sufficient supplies in the future. 

The cut of 2-million barrels a day will be measured against the same baseline as the previous Opec+ agreements. Several member countries are already pumping well below those levels as their oil industries face various challenges, ranging from long-term underinvestment to international sanctions. 

That includes Russia, for which the new daily crude quota of 10.5-million barrels a day is about 500,000 barrels above its September output. A move to cap the export price of Russian oil could lead to a further temporary cut in the country’s production, Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said in an interview. 

The supply curbs announced by Opec+ may not protect its members from an economic slowdown in the way they are hoping, said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.

“This decision risks agitating the US while potentially leading the FOMC [federal open market committee] to keep tightening for longer as inflation will become more sticky,” Hansen said. “The result being a stronger dollar, higher bond yields and a global economic slowdown that may end up taking longer to reverse.”

Bloomberg News. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com