Oil Falls After Saudi Aramco Asked to Raise Output Capacity

Yuka Obayashi
Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Oil prices fell on Wednesday, giving up earlier gains, after Saudi Aramco said it had been directed by the energy ministry to raise its production capacity by a million barrels per day. 

Brent crude slid $0.41, or 1.1%, to $36.81 a barrel by 0740 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude dropped $0.42, or 1.2%, to $33.94 a barrel. Saudi Aramco Chief Executive Amin Nasser said the state-run oil giant had been asked by the Ministry of Energy to boost its production capacity to 13 million barrels per day (bpd) from 12 million bpd now. 

Saudi has been pumping around 9.7 million bpd in the past few months, but has extra capacity it can turn on and has hundreds of millions of barrels of crude in storage. 

Oil prices had climbed earlier in the day, recouping nearly half of Monday's 25% losses, on hopes spending cuts by North American producers to cope with multi-year low crude prices would lead to a drop in output. 

U.S. crude oil inventories rose in the most recent week, while gasoline and distillate stocks dropped, data from industry group the American Petroleum Institute showed. Meanwhile, worries about the economic fallout from the coronavirus outbreak and its impact on energy demand continued to pressure oil prices. 

Policymakers and central banks have been taking measures to bolster their economies against disruption caused by the virus outbreak, the latest being the Bank of England that unexpectedly cut interest rates by half a percent on Wednesday. ,

"Coronavirus is still spreading globally and no doubts that the virus spread in major economies like the United States will continue to hurt oil demand," said Victor Shum, vice president of Energy Consulting at IHS Markit. 

"I think we are looking at $30 levels (in Brent) and I would not be surprised in some day to see prices lower than $30." 

The flu-like coronavirus, which can be transmitted from person to person, originated in China late last year and has spread to more than 60 countries since then. 

It has infected over 100,000 people and killed more than 4,000 globally. (Reporting by Yuka Obayashi; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell, Richard Pullin and Himani Sarkar)

Categories: Middle East Production Saudi Arabia

Related Stories

Eni Makes Significant Gas Discovery Offshore Indonesia

Petronas Enlists MISC for FPU Job at Gas Field Offshore Brunei

Harbour Energy to Sell Stakes in Indonesian Assets to Prime Group for $215M

Finder Energy Buys Petrojarl I FPSO for Timor-Leste Oil and Gas Projects

Greater Sunrise Moves to Next Phase with Timor-Leste, Woodside Deal

Russia Seeks to Boost Oil Exports to China as Sanctions Tighten

Aramco Expands US Partnerships with $30B in New Deals

Vietsovpetro Brings BK-24 Oil Platform Online Two Months Early

Chinese Contractor Secures Offshore Oil and Gas ‘Mega Deal’ from QatarEnergy

CNOOC Brings Online Another Oil and Gas Project in South China Sea

Current News

Eni Makes Significant Gas Discovery Offshore Indonesia

Petronas Enlists MISC for FPU Job at Gas Field Offshore Brunei

Japan’s JERA Signs First Long-Term LNG Deal with India’s Torrent Power

India's ONGC Set to Retain 20% stake in Russia's Sakhalin-1 Project

Harbour Energy to Sell Stakes in Indonesian Assets to Prime Group for $215M

Eni Expands Asian Footprint with Long-Term LNG Contract in Thailand

Finder Energy Buys Petrojarl I FPSO for Timor-Leste Oil and Gas Projects

CNOOC Puts New South China Sea Development Into Production Mode

ADES Nets $63M Contract for Compact Driller Jack-Up off Brunei

Mubadala Energy, PLN Energy Primer Team Up for Andaman Sea Gas Supply

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com